| [This chapter
is based on Mark 3:13-19; Luke 6:12-16.]
"And He goeth
up into a mountain, and calleth unto Him whom He would:
and they came unto Him. And He ordained twelve, that
they should be with Him, and that He might send them
forth to preach." It was beneath the sheltering
trees of the mountainside, but a little distance from
the Sea of Galilee, that the twelve were called to
the apostolate, and the Sermon on the Mount was given.
The fields and hills were the favorite resorts of
Jesus, and much of His teaching was given under the
open sky, rather than in the temple or the synagogues.
No synagogue could have received the throngs that
followed Him; but not for this reason only did He
choose to teach in the fields and groves. Jesus loved
the scenes of nature. To Him each quiet retreat was
a sacred temple. It was under the trees of Eden that
the first dwellers on earth had chosen their sanctuary.
There Christ had communed with the father of mankind.
When banished from Paradise, our first parents still
worshiped in the fields and groves, and there Christ
met them with the gospel of His grace. It was Christ
who spoke with Abraham under the oaks at Mamre; with
Isaac as he went out to pray in the fields at the
eventide; with Jacob on the hillside at Bethel; with
Moses among the mountains of Midian; and with the
boy David as he watched his flocks.
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