Brethren and sisters, I am exceedingly thankful, through the blessings
of the Lord and your faith and prayers, that I have been permitted to
perform a lengthy journey and to return and associate with you again,
to behold your faces, and to lift my voice and bear testimony to the
things of the kingdom of God in this Tabernacle. I feel exceedingly
thankful to my heavenly Father for his preserving mercy, and to my
brethren and sisters for their prayers and faith, and for their
kind assistance, which was bountifully rendered to me, enabling me to
bear the cost of a lengthy and expensive journey. The principal object
of that journey was to visit the lands in which the events recorded in
the Bible transpired. Incidentally we visited many countries, and had
an opportunity of acquiring information and extending acquaintances
into lands which heretofore have been barred against visits from our
Elders, as the Elders, when they went abroad went expressly to preach,
and were frequently prohibited from entering these countries, or if
permitted to enter were not allowed to speak of the Gospel. We, having
means to travel, of course passed along as other travelers, for not
being on a mission for preaching we were not interrupted, and this
enabled us to acquire a knowledge of the laws and customs of the
various countries we visited, and a variety of information that we had
heretofore only got by reading; and I understand very clearly that a
person may read almost any subject and yet a personal inspection will
give better and perhaps more extended or different ideas from those
gleaned solely from reading. In reading books, you learn the views,
thoughts and reflections of the individuals who wrote them, modified
more or less by a great desire in the human heart to make books
readable, in order that they may sell. It is really true that a great
share of the books in the world are written more to be read than to
communicate facts. It is said that when Henry the Fourth was on his
sick bed, his son, knowing his father had always been very fond of
history, proposed to read a little history to him. "Oh," said the
dying king, "I am too far gone to bother my brains with romance." That
showed his opinion of history.
As soon as we reached Rome we began to find the localities referred to
in Scripture. It was in the reign of Augustus Caesar, that Christ was
born. At that time Judea was a tributary kingdom to Rome, its king
being Herod. The decree which went forth from Augustus Caesar, that
all the world should be taxed, of course included Jerusalem and the
entire kingdom of Judea, which at that time was of considerable
extent. Joseph and Mary went to Bethlehem to be taxed with the house
of David, and there being no room in the inn, they took up their
quarters in a stable, and there the Savior was born.
Some years after the ascension of Jesus, St. Paul went to Rome, in
order to get a hearing before Caesar, on an appeal case, which had
been adjourned from time to time before the authorities in Caesarea
Philippi, in consequence of his refusal, it seems from the reading of
the Book of Acts to furnish the "backsheesh." Thinking that Paul's
friends would pay liberally for his relief, his judges had kept him
bound in prison; but as the expected bribe was not forthcoming he was
eventually sent to Rome on his own appeal; and while we were at Rome
we were shown places where he was said to have been imprisoned, and
one room where they said he used to hold meetings, and a variety of
places and incidents connected either directly or indirectly with the
mission of the Apostles in the first century.
In the cathedrals of almost all the countries which we visited we were
shown relics that had been brought from Palestine. At Pisa there is a
burying yard, probably an acre and a quarter in extent, nine feet of
earth having been brought from Palestine as a covering for this
burial place. It takes a permit from the Pope to be buried in that
sacred soil. In the cathedral of San Lorenzo, in Genoa, they showed us
the chain with which John the Baptist was bound, and the casket which
they said contained his head, and a variety of other relics. In the
church of St. Mark, in Venice, they showed us the coffin of St. Mark,
and while there they showed us a casket said to contain the remains of
St. John the Baptist, also the marble slab on which his head fell when
he was executed. I ascertained, however, to my satisfaction, that this
was a local saint, carried by the Venetians, seven or eight hundred
years ago, from Marsaba, in Palestine, where he was recognized as St.
John of Damascus. There is so much relic worship, that it has been
overdone; but we commenced, when we got to Rome, to tread the ground
where the Apostles labored. We visited a prison in which it is said
St. Peter was imprisoned. We saw the spot where he is said to have
escaped from his enemies, and was about to flee, but the Savior called
to him and asked him if he was afraid to die, so says tradition. They
show the print that Peter's foot made when he heard the Savior's
voice. That is on a spot outside of Rome. They built a church on that
place and it contains a statue of St. Peter, the toes of one of the
feet have been worn off, we were told, by kissing, and their place
supplied with bronze. They showed us the stairs, brought from
Jerusalem, which they say led up to Pilate's judgment seat. We saw a
great many people crawling up and down them on their knees, weeping
and wailing and kissing every step.
As we steamed towards the east, we passed the Isle of Candia, the
Crete of Scripture, and were reminded by various places that we saw,
of the incidents of St. Paul's shipwreck.
Before leaving London we made arrangements with the firm of Thomas
Cook & Son, to supply us with railroad facilities, hotel coupons,
steamboat conveyance and transportation from London to Palestine, for
one hundred and thirty days, terminating at Trieste, in Austria, via
Constantinople and Athens. By this means much of the annoyance of
traveling in countries where we did not understand the languages and
manners and customs was avoided.
We reached Egypt and landed at Alexandria on February 6th. We were met
on board our steamer by Mr. Alexander Howard, a dragoman of Messrs.
Cooke & Co. He took charge of our effects, assisted us in passing the
custom house, and conducted us to the Hotel d'Europe, giving us choice
rooms, where we had a magnificent view, and furnishing us all the
information necessary to make our sojourn in Egypt pleasant and
profitable.
In Egypt we were still on Scriptural ground. Egypt, after the days of
Constantine, until those of the Saracens, was a Christian country. In
the seventh century it was conquered by the Saracens or Mahomedans.
Alexandria is supposed to have contained 600,000 inhabitants when it
was conquered by Amru. All the world has been horrified by the
decision of Omar, Caliph of Medina, that the library of
Alexandria—said to be the largest collection of books and manuscripts
in the world—should be consigned to the flames.
"After a siege of fourteen months Amru, also called Amer, took it, and
in his letter to the Caliph Omar, he informed him of the con quest he had made, saying that he had found there 4,000 palaces, a
like number of baths, 400 places of amusement, and 12,000 gardens, and
that one quarter alone was occupied by 40,000 Jews." It is said that
the books and manuscripts of that library furnished fuel for warming
those baths for some four months.
There is in Egypt a sect of Christians called Copts, or the Coptic
church. They are descendants of the inhabitants of Egypt that were
conquered by the Saracens. At Cairo we visited one of their churches,
and were shown the place where they said the Savior, his mother and
Joseph resided during their stay there, when they fled from the wrath
of Herod, and the basin they washed in, and we saw many persons who
had come there to be healed in consequence of the holiness of this
place. This class of Christians—the Copts—have maintained their
identity through the reign of Mahommetan power, Turkish and Arabic,
down to the present time. There is probably a million of them, perhaps
more, in Egypt and Abyssinia. There is also the Oriental Greek Church
in Egypt; they showed us some traditionary holy places.
We went to visit Heliopolis, or the City of On. I have taken a great
interest in family matters, believing in the doctrine of baptism for
the dead, and I went to Heliopolis because I had good reason to
believe that Joseph who was sold into Egypt, married his wife there,
Asenath, daughter of Potiphar, priest of On. Heliopolis is believed to
be the On of that day, and was the great college at which all the
leading men of Egypt were educated. Probably Moses received his
education there. There is a needle or obelisk, some sixty feet out of
the ground, at Heliopolis, containing inscriptions from top to bottom.
How far it goes into the ground I know not, but the inscriptions on
that needle, if rightly interpreted by Egyptian scholars, indicate
that it was probably there when Joseph went to Egypt. The city and all
its temples have gone to decay. Other needles of the same kind, which
were there, have been carried away, one of them stands in
Constantinople. The ground is in a state of cultivation though the
ruins of the city of On are to be seen scattered about, and when we
were there, there was on the ground a luxuriant crop of sugar cane,
showing that the soil was very rich.
Everything that grows in Egypt has to be irrigated from the river
Nile. There is little, in fact no other, water, except that which
comes from the Nile. I say there is no other water, but a little below
the city of On, there is a very old tree—a sycamore I believe, under
which the Copts believe that Joseph, Mary and Jesus camped while they
remained in Egypt, during their flight from Herod. A great number of
the branches have been carried away, and portions of the tree, but its
boughs are still very widespread. The owner of the tree has put
around it a very decent picket fence of pine lumber—I do not know
where he got it—and any man who will give him a franc, he will lend
him a knife and he may cut his name on the fence, but if he will not
give him a franc, he must not do that, and he must not carry away any
of the tree. I did not care about cutting my name on the fence, so I
saved my franc. But there was a spring or well close by, and the water
was drawn up by a mute on a kind of rudely con structed wheel, with a number of earthen vessels tied to the ends of its arms. They
told me that the spring was in ancient times brackish and unfit to
drink, but when Mary came there she bathed in it and it became sweet
and good. I drank some of the water and found it so, tasting very much
like the big spring at St. George. I remarked to the man I really
wished she had made it cold while she was about it, for a drink of
cold water would have been very refreshing just then. This cost me one
franc.
I am not designing, however, to follow the incidents of my journey any
further than they relate, more or less, to the history of those
countries mentioned either directly or by tradition in the Bible. In
Cairo we were shown Joseph's well, and we were told by our guides that
it was made by and called after Joseph who was sold into Egypt. But on
investigation we found that when Saladin, Caliph of Egypt, undertook
to select a place for a citadel in his new city of Cairo, he hung up
meat in different parts around, and he found that fresh meat would
keep longer at that point than any other in the neighborhood, and he
came to the conclusion that that was the healthiest place, and he had
the ground cleared for a citadel, and in doing that they discovered a
well filled with sand. The sand was cleared out, and as one of the
names of the Caliphs was Yoosef, it was called Joseph's well, so it
may be that Joseph who was sold into Egypt made it, and it may not.
Its present name, however, I believe, comes from the Sultan Yoosef
Salah-ed-deen, Caliph of Egypt in the 12th century, a man known to
fame. The water of the well is brackish, and is chiefly used for
laying the dust.
We all felt more or less interest in the locality anciently called the
land of Goshen, but as nobody could tell precisely where the land of
Goshen was, it was necessarily a matter of guesswork. But the streams
of water must run now somewhere near the same as they did then, and we
followed the course of a fresh water canal, which has recently been
turned from the Nile, and which is some one hundred and fifty miles in
length, to Suez and the Red Sea. This canal passes near Zagazig, which
is probably in the vicinity of the land of Goshen; and when the
children of Israel started for Canaan, they had to follow this route
in order to secure themselves the necessary amount of water from that
old fresh water canal, which is now known and identified as having run
very nearly on the same ground as the present one, which has been made
within a few years, and which the railroad follows.
There is a good deal of speculation as to where the children of Israel
crossed the Red Sea, but the most reasonable conclusion I can arrive
at, so far as I have been able to investigate the matter, is that they
followed this fresh water canal, and that they camped near its
terminus on the Red Sea, and crossed over to the peninsula of Sinai,
after which they were miraculously supplied with water, food and
clothing through the deserts of Arabia.
We passed over that portion of the Suez canal, between Ismaila and
Port Said. The Suez canal is certainly a very grand enterprise. Port
Said receives its fresh water from the Nile. It has got pipes over
fifty miles in length to bring that water from the canal at Ismaila to
supply the town. Port Said is considerable of a place, and there is a
good deal of enterprise there.
On the evening of February 22nd, we sailed from Port Said on the
Vesta, one of the steamers belonging to the Austrian Lloyd's.
The next morning we came in sight of Jaffa, the Joppa of the
Scriptures. Jaffa is a kind of promontory or headland, projecting into
the sea. The anchorage is simply an open roadstead, and landing is
sometimes very difficult. If we had had an unfavorable wind and been
carried by that port, it would have cost us considerable time and
expense; but when we reached there the day was pleasant and the sea
smooth, and we landed without difficulty.
At Jaffa we were met by the before-named Mr. Howard, who conducted us
to the Turkish customhouse officer, who, I believe, examined only one
passport, and passed us, and we went directly to our tents, which were
pitched not far from the seaside, near the burial place. They were
very nice wall tents, well carpeted, with all the outfit necessary
ready for use, and we at once commenced keeping house.
This Joppa is the place where King Solomon landed the cedars that he
got from Hiram, King of Tyre, for the building of his Temple. I am of
the opinion that the place has undergone some physical changes since
that time, although I, of course, could not determine to what extent.
In the vicinity of this city is a colony of about six hundred Germans,
under the presidency of D. V. Christopher Hoffman, who consider
themselves the spiritual temple of Christ. They have bought some land
and have put it under cultivation, and they say the rains have
increased there very much within the last few years, and the lands are
very productive. They raise wheat and a variety of grains without
irrigation. They say their gardens and orange groves require
irrigation. I think the olives do not. The most beautiful orange
groves that we saw, perhaps, on our entire journey, were at Jaffa. We
visited this German colony. The American vice-consul, Mr. Hardegg, met
us and treated us with courtesy. He is a German by birth, never was in
America, speaks English. We also saw a number of persons who were
connected with the scheme of one George J. Adams, and who, after its
failure, were left in that country, one of whom, Mr. Floyd, is now a
dragoman. They built some houses, but they have been purchased by this
German colony. We attended a meeting of a missionary, and heard a
Methodist sermon. It seemed to be a very difficult thing to get
together people enough to have a meeting.
I believe the only place of particular Scriptural import which they
pretend to have identified in Joppa is the house of Simon the tanner,
by the seaside. Some were so critical as to doubt whether it was the
identical house in which Peter lodged when the messengers of Cornelius
came; but then, there are the tan vats, and it is right by the
seaside, and the Bible says that Simon was a tanner, and that he lived
by the seaside. They showed us the flat roof on which they say Peter
was sleeping. In one end of the house—the end towards Mecca—there was
a recess, such as the Mahometans have in their mosques to pray in. We
inquired of the man in charge of the house whether Simon was a
Mussulman? He said, "Yes, and there was where he prayed."
It is not important, of course, whether that building is the identical
one or not, yet it has been visited by thousands, and is a source of
revenue. It was in this neighborhood that the Lord revealed to Peter
that what God hath cleansed should not be called common or unclean,
and that it was proper for him to preach the Gospel to the
Gentiles, and from that place he went to visit Cornelius, and
administered the Gospel to those not of the seed of Israel.
Having obtained our horses and saddles, Monday morning, Feb. 24th, we
started for Jerusalem. I could not obtain a Syrian saddle large enough
for me to ride on, and I was compelled to ride on an English saddle.
This made a great difference in my comfort. If I had carried a Spanish
saddle from home, I should have been much more comfortable on my
journey. I was constantly afraid that the fastenings of my English
saddle would give way. I did not think they were strong enough, and
then its construction and shape were not comfortable and convenient,
and in those particulars it was nothing to be compared with a Spanish,
or even with a Syrian saddle. I am pretty heavy, and had not been on
horseback for fifteen years.
Travelers in Palestine suffer greatly from the sun, but we were early
in the season—two weeks earlier than travelers generally set out for
Jerusalem. Mr. Cook was fitting out several parties; but they were two
weeks after us, and we were comparatively alone, though some few
travelers fell in with us incidentally. At noon, we halted at what was
called the Martyr's Tower, in Ramleh. Ramleh has a history relating
particularly to the crusades. It is in the vicinity of the country
anciently occupied by the Philistines, and from its tower, which we
climbed, and which is probably a hundred feet high, we could see a
portion of their country. There is at this place a monastery of monks,
who, it is said, feed travelers of all denominations, and they are
spoken of by all travelers as being very kind. They are Roman
Catholics. Of course we had no need to test their hospitality, for we
had everything within our reach that was necessary to supply our
wants, carrying it right along with us.
In the evening we camped on a very nice stream at the entrance of the
Valley of Ajalon. Our Sunday school children will recollect this very
well, from the fact that Joshua said to the sun, "Stand thou still
upon Gibson, and thou, moon, in the Valley of Ajalon." I ought to
explain that in Palestine what we call a ravine is called a valley,
and wider valleys they call plains.
Before reaching Ramleh we passed through the plains of Sharon, where a
kind of red flower, called the rose of Sharon, grows abundantly, and
the land appears to be very fertile. We were rather surprised, having
heard such accounts of the sterility of Palestine, to find on our
entrance into it that the land was apparently fruitful; though we were
told that if we had come later it would have looked more barren.
Miss E. R. Snow and Miss Clara Little had a tent; Elder Paul A.
Schettler and myself occupied another, over which floated the "Stars
and Stripes." Elders Lorenzo Snow, Albert Carrington, Feramorz Little
and Thos. Jennings occupied another. My tent was used as our
dining room. Our dragoman and cook had each his tent, and we had
another for convenience sake. We were supplied with good camp stools;
we had iron-framed bedsteads, with good mattresses, and good, clean
nice blankets and sheets. All the difficulty about it with me was that
my bedstead was too small for me. I have always had a horror of being
buried in a coffin not big enough, and I have always desired that my
friends—whoever might live to put me in a coffin, would have it at
least two inches bigger every way than I was. I have always felt an noyed at the idea of being buried in a cramped-up coffin. It
often made me think of it when stretched out upon that bedstead, or in
the berths of the ships which I have had to stay in so many days on
this journey, for generally they have been too small for me. Our
dragoman, Aushonny Makloof, of Beyrout, supplied us very well with
provisions. We had our Arab cook and our Turkish muleteers. Only one
of them all could speak a little English, and really, to this day, I
never could tell how many there were, although on some days we had
more and some less, for as we passed through the country we sometimes
hired a sheik and one or two attendants, to go along with us, paying
them for it, so that he need not help himself to our movables without
our consent. Our muleteers took down our tents and tent poles, and
tied up tents, baggage and everything and put it all on to the backs
of the mules. We had to ride out, or spend our time someway, looking
at the country or waiting, as we chose, in the evening for these tents
all to be pitched; but it was generally so arranged that, in our
seeing the country, our muleteers would get on the ground and get the
tents pitched and everything ready, so that when we went there we
could go right in and sit down to the tables or do anything we
pleased.
The second day we had our noon halt on the brook, which they told us
King David got the stones out of, with one of which he killed the
giant of Gath, and that the battle between the Philistines and King
Saul took place along the two sides of this stream. It is called a
valley, but it was simply a ravine. We saw a considerable number of
sheep of various colors there, and some boys tending them, which, of
course reminded us of the fact that King David was tending his
father's sheep when Samuel went to his father's house to anoint one
of the sons of Jesse to be king. King David, it will be remembered,
was the junior of the boys, and he was small of stature compared with
the others. He was sent out to look after the sheep. When Samuel came
to the house of Jesse and told him that one of his sons had to be
king, and he wanted to pick the one, Jesse brought in six tall boys,
one at a time, to each of which Samuel said, "That is not the one."
When the sixth had been refused, said Jesse, "I believe that is all."
"Have you not another?" "O yes, little David, he is out with the
sheep." They sent for him and he was anointed king, and it was he who
slew the giant Goliath; and I suppose if I had enquired of the monks I
might have brought home the identical stone with which he did it, but
I did not take the trouble. The place where we had our meal was not
far from Kirjath-Jearim where the ark is said to have rested, not the
ark of Noah, but the ark of the Lord, for a considerable time after it
fell into the hands of the Philistines.
We again got into the saddle and started for Jerusalem across the
mountain, for that country is one immense limestone quarry. If there
ever was any soil it has blown away until very little remains. What
there is left is evidently very rich where they can get the water to
it: but as we crossed over and got a view of Jerusalem, a feeling of
disappointment was evident on the countenances of every one of the
party, or else I was disappointed and they were not, one or the other.
But the whole thing presented itself to us in a different light from
what we had anticipated, and I then understood why Dr. Burns, in his
"Guide," re commends people to pass round Jerusalem by another
route, and come in from the east and get a first view from the eastern
side. It is because the view from the Mount of Olives—on the eastern
side—is a very great deal better than when you go from the west. It is
said that there is a great deal in first impressions.
The Russians have built some monasteries in and about Jerusalem, and
the Latins have got some, and within the last few years there have
been a number of good new buildings put up. Sir Moses Monteilore has
built a block outside, and not far from the wall. The venerable
Abraham Askenasi, the chief rabbi of Jerusalem, with the contributions
of his friends throughout the world, has erected a considerable number
of rooms as a home for widows and orphans. At first view we could
pick out the mosque of Omar—the place where Solomon's temple stood; we
could also see the Church of the Holy Sepulchre—the place where the
Savior was crucified. We pitched our tent in the valley of Hinnom,
near the Jaffa gate—the gate at which most of the business in
Jerusalem is done. While our tents were pitching we passed in at the
gate, and saw a good many beggars, some of them lepers, also quite a
number of women dressed in white, some of whom were hired mourners and
were wailing. As we passed along we found, not far from the gate, an
old man lying in the street, almost naked and moaning piteously. He
begged of us to give him something. When we got in we called at the
banker's in Jerusalem, and were told that the old man who lay there in
the street begging, whom we had probably noticed, owned six hundred
olive trees, a garden containing quite a number of fig trees, and an
orange grove—that the banker had known him for years, and he came
every year to Jerusalem, and lay on the street almost naked, howling
and moaning piteously, begging from the pilgrims, while he was in
reality one of the wealthy men of the country.
It is not easy to describe that city, nor, so far as I have seen, any
of those Asiatic cities. The streets, if they can be called streets,
are very narrow, and many of them are so crowded with camels, donkeys
and packhorses, that they can only pass each other at certain
places. The houses are rudely built, of a kind of concrete, or of rock
and mortar. They are low and small and the roof flat, generally covered
with cement. There are many buildings in Jerusalem that go to show it
off—mosques and churches, with their minarets, towers and rotundas.
The principal business street in Jerusalem is Christian street, which
is fifteen feet wide. It leads up from the street that we enter from
Jaffa's gate, and has an avenue that leads off to the entrance of the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre. In front of that church is a little open
space filled with beggars, and men with articles for sale—beads,
photographs, jewelry of different kinds, and relics of all kinds. We
could get almost anything in the way of relics we wanted there, and be
assured that they were genuine.
President Carrington remained at Jerusalem while we went to the Dead
Sea. He wanted to do some business connected with the Liverpool
office; and he is not very fond of horseback riding. As you are aware
he has been afflicted with rheumatism considerably, so he remained in
the Mediterranean Hotel while we went to the Dead Sea and the Jordan.
That gave him more time to pass around, and through and over
Jerusalem, than any of us. He had several days, and he declared that
he could never make up his mind as to what induced King David
to locate his capital there. The chief rabbi told me that, anciently,
Jerusalem was well supplied with water; but at the present time there
was really no living water there. The pool of Hezekiah, and other
pools were filled in the rainy season, but in a month from the time we
were there a quart bottle of water would cost a farthing, and
sometimes pretty hard to get. If the aqueducts from the pools of
Solomon were repaired, they would not bring in sufficient water to
supply the city, but in the days of Israel's prosperity, there was
abundance of water there, and he believed there would be again.
I had a letter of introduction, procured by Mr. James Linforth, from
the Rabbi of the Jewish congregation at San Francisco, to Rabbi
Askenasi. He is a very venerable looking man—tall, heavy set and a
good supply of beard, like the Apostles in the picture. He seemed very
much pleased with my visit, treated me with courtesy, showed me their
synagogue and the building they were erecting, and returned the visit,
accompanied by several of the Jewish elders, at my tent, where we had
a very pleasant interview. But there is no infidel on the face of the
earth who can disbelieve the mission of the Savior more than they do.
He says the condition of the Jews is much improved of late years. Now
they can purchase, and if they have only the money to do it with, and
the amount they can buy is only limited by their want of money. They
have also a title from the Turkish government for the ground upon
which they are erecting their home for widows and orphans. This
gentleman told me that no Jew had been inside the enclosure of the
Mosque of Omar, although he believed it stands on the sight of
Solomon's temple, though not in the center of it.
In looking around Jerusalem, I did not regard it in the same light as
President Carrington did. Kingdoms, in those days, were small and
densely populated, and it was necessary for a ruler, in locating a
capital, to have it so that it could be easily defended; and until the
time when modern arms were invented, Jerusalem could be easily
defended. Its siege and capture by the Romans proved, to all intents
and purposes, that it was a very difficult city to take, for though it
was surrounded by several walls, fortified with strong towers, and
naturally defended by its mountainous position and the ravines around
it, each one of these walls was occupied by rival parties, for it will
be remembered by readers of the destruction of Jerusalem, that there
were three separate leaders, and that when the Jews were not fighting
the Romans, they were fighting each other; and it is even doubtful to
this day that, if either John or Simon had had absolute command in
their city and the confidence of the people, whether the Romans could
have taken the place at all or not. An old proverb says that whom the
Gods would destroy they first make mad. It was so with these Jews.
They had slain the Savior, they had violated the commands of God, and
they had brought upon their heads the curses pronounced upon them in
the 27th chapter of Deuteronomy and in a great many other places, if
they did not abide in the law of the Lord; and notwithstanding their
strong city and their numbers, they were so divided among themselves
that they could not make a successful defense. Speaking of this
destruction of Jerusalem carries me back to Rome and the Arch of
Titus, erected to commemorate his victories, on which is engraved a representation of the seven branched candlestick, and a
great variety of the treasures brought by him from Jerusalem.
King David had learned the strength of Jerusalem by the difficulty he
encountered in taking it from the Jebusites; and it is more than
probable that God commanded him to locate the city there.
Rabbi Askenasi, speaking of the ten tribes, said he had no idea where
they were, but he believed they were preserved, and that their
posterity would return, and the time would come when God would bless
Israel, and when water would be abundant in Jerusalem. We read in the
47th chap. of Ezekiel, that living waters were to come out from
Jerusalem, and that they should run toward the east; and that the
Prophet saw a man with a measuring line in his hand. He measured a
thousand cubits, and the water was to his ankles; he measured another
thousand, and it was to his knees; another thousand, and it was to his
loins; another thousand, and it was a river with waters to swim in,
that could not be passed over. He goes on and describes this as
something that should take place at Jerusalem. I could but reflect,
when standing on the Mount of Olives, on the saying concerning it in
the last chapter of Zechariah, where, in speaking of the coming of the
Savior, it says his feet shall stand on the Mount of Olives, which is
before Jerusalem to the east, and the mount shall cleave in the midst
thereof, half going toward the north, and half toward the south. There
shall be a very great valley, and the land shall be turned into a
plain from Geba to Rimmon, south of Jerusalem, and shall be lifted up,
and men shall dwell on it. The same Prophet tells us that living
waters shall come out of Jerusalem, half toward the former sea, and
half toward the hinder sea, and that in summer and in winter shall it
be.
The convent at Mar Saba is situated on the canyon, which is the outlet
of the brook Kedron; but it was perfectly dry when we were there, not
a drop of water running in it. There are seasons of the year, I
suppose, when waters run there, but these prophecies declare that
living waters shall run out of Jerusalem in summer and winter, and I
am foolish enough to believe that they will be literally fulfilled. I
agreed with Rabbi Askenasi in the belief that God would restore that
land to Israel, and that Jerusalem would again be supplied with
abundance of water and be a glorious and happy city. I saw many
Christians of different denominations there who had no such faith. One
man came into our tent, and assured us that baptism by immersion was
impossible, there never had been water enough in that country to
immerse people. He had believed in immersion, he said, but since he
had traveled through the country and had seen so little water, he was
satisfied that they would all have to go to Jordan to be baptized.
This is the way people look at it. The country is dry and barren, the
rains have ceased upon it for many generations, though they have had
occasional rains.
In going to the Dead Sea from Jerusalem, we visited a number of points
of interest. One was the tomb of Rachel, another the pools of
Solomon—three immense pools constructed to receive the waters of a
spring and hold them in reserve, and the old aqueduct is still in
repair almost to Bethlehem. We visited Bethlehem, and were shown the
caves—called stables—in which the Savior was born, and the churches
and ornaments. There was a great variety of people there, many
begging and many trying to sell you relics. The country is without
fences. There are a good many spots where there is an opportunity for
the Bedouins to come along and scratch the ground with a kind of
shovel plough they have, hitch some calves or very small cattle, and
raise some barley. We purchased barley all the time for feeding our
animals.
At the place which we supposed is called in Scripture the wilderness,
or the border of the wilderness next to the Dead Sea, where John the
Baptist commenced his preaching, is an immense convent. It was founded
by a man named Saba. "Mar" in the Syrian language means saint, and
when we speak of Mar Saba, it means saint Saba. This is the name of
the convent. This man lived to be some ninety-four years old. He
concealed himself from his enemies a considerable time in caves, but
his power increased with the number of his friends, for he gathered
around him a good many thousand monks, and they built this immense
convent, which was strongly fortified for those times. They allow no
women to enter, and no person can go into their building without a
permit from the Greek Patriarch at Jerusalem. We had a permit to enter
that convent, but sister Snow and sister Little, of course, had to go
to the camp. It would probably have been considered an outrage for
them to have come in sight of the gates. Having sent up our permit, we
were admitted and passed through the building. There were sixty-five
monks there, some of whom had been there thirty-seven years. A man has
to be exceedingly holy to be permitted to go there. I looked at them,
and wondered what could induce men to adopt such a life. They showed
us one room filled with skulls. They said there were fifteen hundred
of them, and they were the skulls of their brethren who had been
killed by the Saracens at different times. They had taken great pains
to preserve the skulls, with their names and registers. They have a
spring of water which has a miraculous history, and they have one palm
tree growing, which they say was planted by Saint Saba himself. They
seem to have an eye to business. They had canes for sale, made from
willows which they get the Arabs to bring from the Jordan. None of
them are allowed to go out, and they are compelled to have everything
brought to them. They had a number of fancy articles of their own
manufacture for sale. I bought a small string of shells, which they
said were brought from the Dead Sea. They gather a few francs from
every party of travelers in this way. There was another party of
Americans nearby who wanted to visit the monastery, but they had no
permit; and a message was sent to us by them, saying, that if we would
delay a little while we could all pass in with our permit. We had met
the party and knew them to be nice, intelligent gentlemen. We stayed
about an hour to accommodate these friends, and they passed in with
us, otherwise they would have had to go clear back to Jerusalem for a
permit. These persons—four gentlemen and two ladies—finding that we
were going down to the Dead Sea, went along with us, and made the
journey safe and pleasant. We went down to the Dead Sea the day
following our visit to the monastery. I have seen a good many rough
roads in Utah in the mountains, but of all the rough horseback riding
I ever did see, I think that Palestine has the premium. Being pretty
heavy, it was difficult for me to get on and off my horse, but because of the rough roads in some places, I dismounted and led my
animal. I found, however, that he could stand better than I could, so
I rode him, and I believe that some of the Saints here at home must
have had faith hold that animal up, or he would have stumbled. I rode
him four hundred miles, three hundred of which there was no road with
any right to the name, and he never slipped or stumbled.
Some of the party went into the Dead Sea and had a swim. I did not.
Some of them inquired for Lot's wife—the "pillar of salt." I expect
she was at the other end of the sea, for we did not see her. The Dead
Sea is a remarkable body of water. According to scientific
observations, as read in the report of Lieutenant Lynch and others, it
is 1350 feet lower than the Mediterranean. It is probably one of the
deepest holes in the world. It is perhaps eight or ten miles wide and
about forty long. It occupies the site of the cities of the
plain—Sodom and Gomorrah, and Admah and Zeboim, upon which, in
consequence of their wickedness, we are told that God rained fire and
brimstone and destroyed them. The probability is that they were buried
by a volcanic eruption, and that they and most of the valley of the
Jordan were sunk at the same time. The probability is that that the
Jordan ran through these cities, and that this deep basin being
formed, the Jordan forms the Dead Sea, which has no outlet, much like
our Salt Lake. There is a wonderful similarity between that country
and this, only this, of course, is on a grander scale. Our Salt Lake
answers very well to the Dead Sea; our Utah Lake answers very well to
the Sea of Galilee, and some of the streams that run into Utah Lake
answer very well to the upper streams of the Jordan. It hardly seems
credible to me, but all the guide books assert that the Sea of Galilee
is 650 feet below the level of the Mediterranean. The country is
subject to earthquakes, and bears the evident marks of many of them.
In 1837, Tiberium, the Tiberias of ancient times, was very severely
damaged by an earthquake, the effects of which are visible to anyone
who visits it. I have wondered how the Lord would restore that
country. I thought he had got to have some kind of a process to hoist
the waters of the Dead Sea above the level of the ocean, so that a
stream could run out of it in order for it to be healed. Prophecy says
that the waters that should run out of Jerusalem should run down to
the east sea, and the waters of the east sea were to be healed, and
there was to be a multitude of fishes, but now no living thing can
exists in the Dead Sea. But if these prophecies are fulfilled, and I
have not any doubt that they will be, these waters are to be healed,
and I believe that the Lord will use natural means to bring it about.
We returned by way of Jordan. The stream is not so large as our Jordan
here, but quite a nice river. The Arabs were very much afraid when we
went into it, that we would go beyond our depth. It was safe to go as
far as certain rapids, but it was not safe to go beyond them. They
said that some zealous fellows got in so far that they could not get
out, and one or two were lost, and they had some difficulty to fish
the others out. Some willows and different kinds of timber grow along
its banks.
We were supposed to be at the place where the Savior was baptized, and
also at the place where Elijah smote the waters with his mantle, and
he and Elisha crossed over dry-shod, and Elijah then went to heaven in a chariot of fire, after which Elisha passed back in the
same manner. We saw the place where it is supposed the children of
Israel, under Joshua, crossed over the river dry-shod. There is good
reason to suppose that they crossed in harvest time, and that the
waters were high. They say the waters of the Jordan are highest in
harvest time. We had a ride across the plain probably seven or eight
miles. That plain could be watered by irrigation. I was often asked if
we were going to settle in Palestine. I replied that we were not, but
I could take a thousand "Mormons;" go up the Jordan, put in a dam to
take out the water, and irrigate several thousand acres. But there is
little, however, at present inviting about the country, but it would no
doubt be productive if irrigated. The valleys near the source of the
Jordan would be much the best for cultivation, and the climate would
be more agreeable.
Jericho, or rather the old site of that city, has a good many mounds.
Men have dug into many of them, but we were told that no valuables had
been found. We camped that night at Aines-Sultain, generally called
the fountain of Elisha, because tradition says that, on his return
after Elijah had ascended to heaven, he healed the waters of this
fountain. Before then they were salt, but by a miracle he made them
sweet. They are now delicious, and after our hard day's ride in the
heat and dust, we found the waters of the fountain of Elisha very
palatable.
That night there was a company of Bedouins came and danced and sang
for us. They had a sham fight, and I think it requires a man of pretty
good nerve to sit and look at them and not be afraid that they would
whip some of their crooked scimiters through his body. Each one of our
party paid them something like two francs, which satisfied them. I
believe a ticket at our theater here in Salt Lake would cost more than
that, and take it as a whole their performance was not very expensive.
They went off in a very fine humor. I could not understand their
songs, but our dragoman interpreted the chorus of one of them to be,
"May the ladies' eyes be like the moon."
From that place to Jerusalem the route is very rough. Some years ago a
Russian lady, a very pious woman, went on a pilgrimage to the Jordan,
and while riding over some of these rough ways she was thrown from her
horse and had her arm broken and was badly hurt. She expended her
money in improving a portion of the way, and on this account one of
the canyons was much easier to go through than before that time.
We passed by other ancient sites, spoken of in the Bible as having
been large cities, and no doubt they were; but we must bear always in
mind that that was an age when Israel paid their tithes and offerings,
and God blessed the land. At noon we stopped at a place called
Christ's Hotel, all of us very much fatigued. Our luggage train went
ahead. In the afternoon we passed by Bethany, where Christ raised
Lazarus, and saw what was pointed out to us as the house of Mary and
Martha, and also the tomb of Lazarus. In the evening we camped again
at Jaffa's gate at Jerusalem, finding our tents pitched and everything
comfortable. We used to sing about the flowery banks of Jordan, but it
takes off the romance to go and see them; yet when irrigation and
industry and the blessing of the Lord prevailed along them, I have no
doubt they were as beautiful as any places in the world.
I made two careful visits to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and one
to the Mosque of Omar and the grounds connected with it. I also
visited many other places of interest about Jerusalem, but in giving
you a detailed account of what we saw and passed through, in such a
scattering way, I cannot communicate to so large an audience, to any
extent, the impressions I felt at the time. I had no doubt that I
passed over the grounds where the Savior and his Apostles, and the
Prophets, kings and nobles of Israel had lived, although I did not
believe a great deal about the identical spots set down by the monks,
yet I was satisfied that I was in the localities in which the great
events recorded in Scripture took place. But now little remains on the
top of the ground that can be identified beyond the period of the
occupation of the Crusaders or the Romans. We certainly saw the top of
Mount Moriah, on which stands the Mosque of Omar. There are the rocks
and the caves in them. The rocks have not been made by men. The Valley
of Jehosophat is there. Learned men have dug deeply under Jerusalem in
search of evidence to determine its original site, but an alarm was
created that the monkery of the place might be spoiled by determining
that certain localities were not where they are now represented, and
the Turkish government was moved, so I was informed by some gentlemen,
to stop the investigations and to close up the excavations, and we
were not permitted to enter them.
President Lorenzo Snow's correspondence to the Deseret News, Elder
Paul A. Sehettler's correspondence to the Salt Lake Herald, and Miss
E. R. Snow's communications and poems to the Woman's Exponent, with
other published letters, all composed under circumstances of great
labor and fatigue, give a very correct idea of our visit to Jerusalem
and journeyings generally. Elder Paul A. Schettler speaks six
languages, and in attending to the financial business of the party, he
had to make exchanges and was compelled to keep accounts in the
currency of a dozen different nations, and even among the Arabs he
could generally find some one who could speak in some one of the
languages with which he was acquainted.
God has preserved me. Our party of eight went through the entire
journey without an accident. We never missed a connection that
amounted to any difficulty. We were in no manner injured; we had no
sickness, except, peradventure, a little cold or a pinch of rheumatism
now and again for a day or two. Our minds were clear, we saw more, I
believe, in the eight months, than ordinary travelers see in two
years. We visited a number of places in Holland, Belgium and France.
We crossed three times over Italy. We visited the Ionian isles, Egypt,
Palestine and Syria, Turkey in Europe, Greece, Bavaria, Austria and
Prussia, and other parts of Germany. We spent eleven days in examining
the mysteries of Rome. I paid four Italians to carry me to the crater
of Mount Vesuvius. I think they earned their money, at any rate I was
well satisfied with them. I had an idea in my own mind of how the
crater looked, but I am now satisfied that I could form no correct
opinion without seeing it. To reach the crater you have to mount
about 1,500 feet perpendicular in height above where we could ride on
horseback, in loose volcanic sand, and every time a man's foot was
placed in it, it would slip back about twice the length of his foot. I
could not stand the walk, these Italians wanted the contract, and I
gave it to them.
My time is exhausted. I thank God for the privilege, of seeing you.
When on the Mount of Olives, with our faces bowed toward Jerusalem, we
lifted our prayers to God that he would preserve you and confound your
enemies. We felt in our hearts that Zion was onward and upward, and
that no power could stay her progress; that the day was not far
distant when Israel would gather, and those lands would begin to teem
with a people who would worship God and keep his commandments; that
plenty and the blessings of eternity would be poured out bounteously
upon that desert land, and that all the prophecies concerning the
restoration of the house of Israel would be fulfilled. God has
commenced his work by revealing the everlasting Gospel to the
Latter-day Saints, and may we all be faithful and fulfill our part is
my prayer in the name of Jesus. Amen.
- George A. Smith