Chapter 2The Chosen PeopleFor 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.
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