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Chapter 2
The Chosen People
FOR more than a thousand years the Jewish people had awaited the Saviour's coming. Upon
this event they had rested their brightest hopes. In song and prophecy, in temple rite and
household prayer, they had enshrined His name. And yet at His coming they knew Him not.
The Beloved of heaven was to them "as a root out of a dry ground;" He had
"no form nor comeliness;" and they saw in Him no beauty that they should desire
Him. "He came unto His own, and His own received Him not." Isa. 53:2; John 1:11.
Yet God had chosen Israel. He had called them to preserve among men the knowledge of His
law, and of the symbols and prophecies that pointed to the Saviour. He desired them to be
as wells of salvation to the world. What Abraham was in the land of his sojourn, what
Joseph was in Egypt, and Daniel in the courts of Babylon, the Hebrew people were to be
among the nations. They were to reveal God to men.
In the call of Abraham the Lord had said, "I will bless thee; . . . and thou shalt be
a blessing: . . . and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed." Gen. 12:2,
3. The same teaching was repeated through the prophets. Even after Israel had been wasted
by war and captivity, the promise was theirs, "The remnant of Jacob shall be in the
midst of many people as a dew from the Lord, as the showers upon the grass, that tarrieth
not for man, nor waiteth for the sons of men." Micah 5:7. Concerning the temple at
Jerusalem, the Lord declared through Isaiah, "Mine house shall be called an house of
prayer for all peoples." Isa. 56:7, R. V.
But the Israelites fixed their hopes upon worldly greatness. From the time of their
entrance to the land of Canaan, they departed from the commandments of God, and followed
the ways of the heathen. It was in vain that God sent them warning by His prophets. In
vain they suffered the chastisement of heathen oppression. Every reformation was followed
by deeper apostasy.
Had Israel been true to God, He could have accomplished His purpose through their honor
and exaltation. If they had walked in the ways of obedience, He would have made them
"high above all nations which He hath made, in praise, and in name, and in
honor." "All people of the earth," said Moses, "shall see that thou
art called by the name of the Lord; and they shall be afraid of thee." "The
nations which shall hear all these statutes" shall say, "Surely this great
nation is a wise and understanding people." Deut. 26:19; 28:10; 4:6. But because of
their unfaithfulness, God's purpose could be wrought out only through continued adversity
and humiliation.
They were brought into subjection to Babylon, and scattered through the lands of the
heathen. In affliction many renewed their faithfulness to His covenant. While they hung
their harps upon the willows, and mourned for the holy temple that was laid waste, the
light of truth shone out through them, and a knowledge of God was spread among the
nations. The heathen systems of sacrifice were a perversion of the system that God had
appointed; and many a sincere observer of heathen rites learned from the Hebrews the
meaning of the service divinely ordained, and in faith grasped the promise of a Redeemer.
Many of the exiles suffered persecution. Not a few lost their lives because of their
refusal to disregard the Sabbath and to observe the heathen festivals. As idolaters were
roused to crush out the truth, the Lord brought His servants face to face with kings and
rulers, that they and their people might receive the light. Time after time the greatest
monarchs were led to proclaim the supremacy of the God whom their Hebrew captives
worshiped.
By the Babylonish captivity the Israelites were effectually cured of the worship of graven
images. During the centuries that followed, they suffered from the oppression of heathen
foes, until the conviction became fixed that their prosperity depended upon their
obedience to the law of God. But with too many of the people obedience was not prompted by
love. The motive was selfish. They rendered outward service to God
as the means of attaining to national greatness. They did not become the light of the
world, but shut themselves away from the world in order to escape temptation to idolatry.
In the instruction given through Moses, God had placed restrictions upon their association
with idolaters; but this teaching had been misinterpreted. It was intended to prevent them
from conforming to the practices of the heathen. But it was used to build up a wall of
separation between Israel and all other nations. The Jews looked upon Jerusalem as their
heaven, and they were actually jealous lest the Lord should show mercy to the Gentiles.
After the return from Babylon, much attention was given to religious instruction. All over
the country, synagogues were erected, where the law was expounded by the priests and
scribes. And schools were established, which, together with the arts and sciences,
professed to teach the principles of righteousness. But these agencies became corrupted.
During the captivity, many of the people had received heathen ideas and customs, and these
were brought into their religious service. In many things they conformed to the practices
of idolaters.
As they departed from God, the Jews in a great degree lost sight of the teaching of the
ritual service. That service had been instituted by Christ Himself. In every part it was a
symbol of Him; and it had been full of vitality and spiritual beauty. But the Jews lost
the spiritual life from their ceremonies, and clung to the dead forms. They trusted to the
sacrifices and ordinances themselves, instead of resting upon Him to whom they pointed. In
order to supply the place of that which they had lost, the priests and rabbis multiplied
requirements of their own; and the more rigid they grew, the less of the love of God was
manifested. They measured their holiness by the multitude of their ceremonies, while their
hearts were filled with pride and hypocrisy.
With all their minute and burdensome injunctions, it was an impossibility to keep the law.
Those who desired to serve God, and who tried to observe the rabbinical precepts, toiled
under a heavy burden. They could find no rest from the accusings of a troubled conscience.
Thus Satan worked to discourage the people, to lower their conception of the character of
God, and to bring the faith of Israel into contempt. He hoped to establish the claim put
forth when he rebelled in heaven,--that the requirements of God were unjust, and could not
be obeyed. Even Israel, he declared, did not keep the law.
While the Jews desired the advent of the Messiah, they had no true
conception of His mission. They did not seek redemption from sin, but deliverance from the
Romans. They looked for the Messiah to come as a conqueror, to break the oppressor's
power, and exalt Israel to universal dominion. Thus the way was prepared for them to
reject the Saviour.
At the time of the birth of Christ the nation was chafing under the rule of her foreign
masters, and racked with internal strife. The Jews had been permitted to maintain the form
of a separate government; but nothing could disguise the fact that they were under the
Roman yoke, or reconcile them to the restriction of their power. The Romans claimed the
right of appointing and removing the high priest, and the office was often secured by
fraud, bribery, and even murder. Thus the priesthood became more and more corrupt. Yet the
priests still possessed great power, and they employed it for selfish and mercenary ends.
The people were subjected to their merciless demands, and were also heavily taxed by the
Romans. This state of affairs caused widespread discontent. Popular outbreaks were
frequent. Greed and violence, distrust and spiritual apathy, were eating out the very
heart of the nation.
Hatred of the Romans, and national and spiritual pride, led the Jews still to adhere
rigorously to their forms of worship. The priests tried to maintain a reputation for
sanctity by scrupulous attention to the ceremonies of religion. The people, in their
darkness and oppression, and the rulers, thirsting for power, longed for the coming of One
who would vanquish their enemies and restore the kingdom to Israel. They had studied the
prophecies, but without spiritual insight. Thus they overlooked those scriptures that
point to the humiliation of Christ's first advent, and misapplied those that speak of the
glory of His second coming. Pride obscured their vision. They interpreted prophecy in
accordance with their selfish desires.
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