<h2>The Lord's Land</h2><div class="chaptertitle">CHAPTER 1</div>
<div class='cap'>FIRST OF ALL, let us take a journey to the land
where Jesus lived. We will sail in one of the big
ocean steamers across the Atlantic, heading our
prow a little to the south, and in eight days will pause
at the Rock of Gibraltar, which stands on guard at the
gate of the Mediterranean Sea. Do you know what "Mediterranean"
means? It means, "among the lands"; and
when you look at this sea on the map, you see that it has
lands around it on every side, with only a narrow opening at
Gibraltar, where its blue waters pour into the Atlantic Ocean.</div>
<p>We will enter the Mediterranean Sea, and sail its
entire length, past Spain and France and Italy on the
left. We just miss touching the toe of Italy, for you
know Italy runs into the sea like a great leg with a
high-heeled boot upon its foot. And just beyond Italy
we sail by Greece, which looks somewhat like a hand
with fingers wide apart.</p>
<p>While we are passing by these lands on the left,
we are also sailing past Morocco and Algiers, and Tunis
and Tripoli on the right. We stop at Alexandria in
Egypt, at one of the mouths of the river Nile, and
soon after we leave the big steamer at Port Said, where
the great Suez Canal begins.</p>
<p>There in the afternoon about ten days after our
leaving America, we go on board a smaller ship, and
sail northward past the eastern shore of the Mediterranean
Sea. The next morning we awake to find our
ship at anchor in front of a city on a hillside, rising
up in terraces from the water.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>That city is now called Jaffa, or Yafa; and it is
the place where the steamers stop to send ashore those
who are about to visit the Holy Land, for that is the
name given to the land where Jesus lived. Do you
remember in the Old Testament the story of Jonah, the
prophet who tried to run away from God's call to preach
in the city of Nineveh? Well, it was from this city of
Jaffa, then called Joppa, that Jonah started on his
voyage, which ended inside the big fish. Perhaps you
remember also the story of Dorcas, in the New Testament,
that good woman who helped the poor; and
after dying was raised to life through the prayer of
the Apostle Peter. Dorcas too lived at Joppa; and
they show the house where, it is said, Peter stayed while
he was visiting in that city.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/illus-026-big.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illus-026.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="140" alt="Map of Mediterranean Sea" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">The Mediterranean Sea</span></div>
<p>Here at Jaffa or Joppa we end our long sea-voyage
of about six thousand miles. We go ashore in a small
boat, tossing up and down on the waves, for there is
no wharf where a steamer can land its passengers. And
now we are standing on the soil of the Holy Land, where
Jesus lived. In Christ's time this land was called Judea.
In our day its name is Palestine.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-027.jpg" width-obs="412" height-obs="448" alt="photo" /> <span class="caption">There is no real harbor at Jaffa. Steamers must anchor some distance out, and passengers are landed by rowboats</span></div>
<p>It is a small country. If you will turn to the map
of the United States, and look at New Hampshire,
you will see a state in form quite like Palestine, and
only a little smaller in size; for Palestine, or the Holy
Land, contains about twelve thousand square miles,
and New
Hampshire a
little more
than nine
thousand.</p>
<p>From
Joppa we
must go
across Palestine
if we
would look at
the part of the
land among
the mountains
where
Jesus lived.
We can now
ride in a railroad
train,
something
that Jesus
never saw
while he lived on the earth; or we can go in a carriage,
or on a horse, or on the back of a camel, as you will
see some people riding, or in what they call "a palankeen,"
which is something like a coach-body set not on
wheels, but between two pair of shafts, one in front, the
other behind, and a mule harnessed in each pair, so
that the rider has one mule in front and the other back
of him.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As we ride over the land we notice that at first
it is very level. This part of the country is called "the
Sea Coast Plain," and a plain it surely is, almost as
level as a floor. All around, you see gardens and farms,
orange trees and fig trees. If you could pluck one of
these golden oranges and taste it, you would find that
it is one of the sweetest and richest and juiciest that
you have ever eaten, for the Jaffa oranges are famous
for their flavor. You ride between great fields of wheat
and rye and barley, for this Sea Coast Plain is a rich
farming land.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-028.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="313" alt="House" /> <span class="caption">House of Simon, the tanner, in Joppa, where Peter stayed while visiting in that city</span></div>
<p>But after a few miles, ten or fifteen, we notice that
we have left the plain and are winding and climbing
among hills. In place of the farm-lands, we see here
and there flocks of sheep with shepherds guarding them
just as the boy David watched over his flock three
thousand years ago. Indeed, in our journey we might
pass over the very brook where David found the round,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
smooth stones, one of which he hurled with a sling into
the giant Goliath's forehead. This is the region of low
hills, the foothills of the higher mountains beyond. It
is called "the Shephelah," a name not easy to remember.
In the Old Testament days, many battles were fought
on these hills between the Israelites and the Philistines,
their fierce enemies.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-029.jpg" width-obs="295" height-obs="285" alt="camel" /> <span class="caption">A saddled camel</span></div>
<p>These foothills of the Shephelah are not many
miles wide; and beyond them we come to the real
Mountain Region of Palestine. Mountains rise on
every hand, bare, stony,
with scarcely any soil upon
their steep sides, and with
not a tree to be seen for
miles. They are rocky
crags, with here and there
a village perched on their
summits or clinging to
their walls. This mountain
land, more than the
hills and plains below, was
the home of the Israelites,
the people from whom
Jesus came. We wonder
how they could ever have found a living in such a desolate
land; but everywhere we see the ruins of old cities, showing
that once the land was filled with people. In those times,
two thousand and more years ago, all these mountain-sides,
now bleak and rock-bound, were covered with
terraces, where grew olive trees, fig trees and vineyards;
where gardens blossomed and great crops were raised
to feed the people. Even now in the spring and early
summer, the valleys between these mountains are covered
with flowers of every color. Scarcely another land
on earth has as many wild flowers as this land of Palestine.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
This mountain-belt, running from the north to
the south throughout the land was the part of Palestine
where nearly all the great men of Israel lived and died.
Here among the mountains in the south is Bethlehem,
where Jesus was born. In a mountain village in the
north, Nazareth, was the home of Jesus during nearly
all his life; and over these mountains everywhere in the
land, Jesus walked in the three years of his preaching
and teaching.</p>
<p>We pass over these mountains from east to west,
and then from the heights we look down to a valley
which runs north and south, the deepest in all the world,
where we can see a little river with many windings, and
rapids and falls, rolling onward to drop at last into a
blue lake in the south. This river, as you know, is
the Jordan, crossed by the Israelites when they first
came to this land; the river where Naaman washed
away his leprosy, where Elijah struck the waves with
his mantle and parted them, and in whose water Jesus
was baptized.</p>
<p>We journey across this Jordan valley, from ten to
twenty miles wide, and then we climb again high and
steep mountains. This region is called the Eastern
Table Land, because the mountains gradually sink down
to a great desert plain on the east. Here we see the
ruins of once great cities, where now only a few wandering
Arabs pitch their tents.</p>
<p>We have now crossed the land of Palestine, and
we have found that it contains five parts lying in a line:
first, the Sea Coast Plain; second, the Shephelah, or
foothills; third, the Mountain Region; fourth, the
Jordan valley; and fifth, the Eastern Table Land.</p>
<p>But we must keep in mind that the land when
Jesus lived there was very different from the land as
we see it. Now it is a poor land; then it was rich.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
Now its villages are made of miserable mud-houses,
where live people who look half starved; then it was
a land of well-built towns and happy people. Now we
find roads that are mere tracks over the stones; then
there were good roads everywhere. Now the hills rise
bare and rocky; then they were covered with gardens.
Now scarcely a tree can be seen in miles of travel; then
the olive and the vine and the palm grew everywhere.
We see the land in its ruin; Jesus saw it in its riches.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-031.jpg" width-obs="560" height-obs="382" alt="Photo of Gehenna" /> <span class="caption">The valley of Gehenna, to the east of Jerusalem</span></div>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />