P1497:7, 135:3.1
Along the valley of this little brook John built no less than a dozen stone
shelters and night corrals, consisting of
piled-up stones, wherein he could
watch over and safeguard his herds of sheep and goats. John's life as a shepherd
afforded him a great deal of time for thought. He talked much with Ezda, an
orphan lad of
Beth-zur, whom he had in a way adopted, and who cared for the
herds when he made trips to Hebron to see his mother and to sell sheep, as
well as when he went down to Engedi for Sabbath services. John and the lad
lived very simply, subsisting on
mutton, goat's milk, wild honey, and the
edible locusts of that region. This, their regular diet, was supplemented
by provisions brought from Hebron and Engedi from time to time.
P1498:1, 135:3.2
Elizabeth kept John posted about Palestinian and world affairs, and his conviction
grew deeper and deeper that the time was fast approaching when the old order
was to end; that he was to become the herald of the approach of a new age,
"the kingdom of heaven." This rugged shepherd was very partial to the writings
of the Prophet Daniel. He read a thousand times Daniel's description of the
great image, which Zacharias had told him represented the history of the great
kingdoms of the world, beginning with Babylon, then Persia, Greece, and finally
Rome. John perceived that already was Rome composed of such polyglot peoples
and races that it could never become a strongly cemented and firmly consolidated
empire. He believed that Rome was even then divided, as Syria, Egypt, Palestine,
and other provinces; and then he further read "in the days of these kings
shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed. And
this kingdom shall not be left to other people but shall break in pieces and
consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand forever." "And there was given
him dominion and glory and a kingdom that all peoples, nations, and languages
should serve him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not
pass away, and his kingdom never shall be destroyed." "And the kingdom and
dominion and the greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven shall be
given to the people of the saints of the Most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting
kingdom, and all
dominions shall serve and obey him."
P1498:2, 135:3.3
John was never able completely to rise above the confusion produced by what
he had heard from his parents concerning Jesus and by these passages which
he read in the Scriptures. In Daniel he read: "I saw in the night visions,
and, behold, one like the Son of Man came with the clouds of heaven, and there
was given him dominion and glory and a kingdom." But these words of the prophet
did not harmonize with what his parents had taught him. Neither did his talk
with Jesus, at the time of his visit when he was eighteen years old, correspond
with these statements of the Scriptures. Notwithstanding this confusion, throughout
all of his perplexity his mother assured him that his distant cousin, Jesus
of Nazareth, was the true Messiah, that he had come to sit on the throne of
David, and that he (John) was to become his advance herald and chief support.
P1498:3, 135:3.4
From all John heard of the vice and wickedness of Rome and the
dissoluteness
and moral barrenness of the empire, from what he knew of the evil doings of
Herod Antipas and the governors of Judea, he was minded to believe that the
end of the age was impending. It seemed to this rugged and noble child of
nature that the world was ripe for the end of the age of man and the dawn
of the new and divine age -- the kingdom of heaven. The feeling grew in John's
heart that he was to be the last of the old prophets and the first of the
new. And he fairly
vibrated with the mounting impulse to go forth and proclaim
to all men: "Repent! Get right with God! Get ready for the end; prepare yourselves
for the appearance of the new and eternal order of earth affairs, the kingdom
of heaven."