A Child's Life Of Christ. Stretton Hesba
The Child's Life Of Christ
HESBA STRATTON
The Child's Life of Christ, H. Stratton
Jazzybee Verlag Jürgen Beck
86450 Altenmünster, Loschberg 9
Deutschland
ISBN: 9783849673536
www.jazzybee-verlag.de
CONTENTS:
CHAPTER II. JERUSALEM AND BETHLEHEM. 5
CHAPTER VI. THE FIRST PASSOVER, 17
CHAPTER I. JOHN THE BAPTIST. 21
CHAPTER II. CANA OF GALILEE. 23
CHAPTER III. THE FIRST SUMMER. 26
CHAPTER V. THE FIRST SABBATH MIRACLE. 32
CHAPTER VIII. FOES FROM JERUSALEM. 41
CHAPTER XI. A HOLIDAY IN GALILEE.. 51
CHAPTER XIII. AT HOME ONCE MORE. 59
CHAPTER XIV. THE LAST AUTUMN. 63
CHAPTER XVI. THE LAST SABBATH. 73
BOOK III. VICTIM AND VICTOR. 76
CHAPTER I.— THE SON OF DAVID. 76
CHAPTER III. THE PASCHAL SUPPER. 84
CHAPTER V. THE HIGH-PRIEST'S PALACE. 91
CHAPTER VI. PILATE'S JUDGMENT HALL. 94
CHAPTER VIII. IN THE GRAVE. 101
CHAPTER IX. THE SEPULCHER. 104
CHAPTER XI. IT IS THE LORD. 112
Preface
The following slight and brief sketch is merely the story of the life and death of our Lord. It has been written for those who have not the leisure, or the books, needed for threading together the fragmentary and scattered incidents recorded in the Four Gospels. Of late years these records have been searched diligently for the smallest links, which might serve to complete the chain of those years passed amongst us by One who called himself the Son of man, and did not refuse to be called the Son of God. This little book is intended only to present the result of these close investigations, made by many learned men, in a plain, continuous narrative, suitable for unlearned readers. There is nothing new in it. It would be difficult to write anything new of that Life, which has been studied and sifted for nearly nineteen hundred years.
The great mystery that surrounds Christ is left untouched. Neither love nor thought of ours can reach the heart of it, whilst still we see him as through a glass darkly. When we behold him as he is, face to face, then, and only then, shall we know fully what he was, and what he did for us. Whilst we strain our eyes to catch the mysterious vision, but dimly visible, we are in danger of becoming blind to that human, simple, homely life, spent amongst us as the pattern of our days. "'If any man think that he knoweth anything, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know. But if any man love God, the same is known of him." Happy they who are content with being known of God.