Mount Olivet
(Latin, Mons Olivertus.)
Occurring also in the English Bibles as the
Mount of Olives (Mons Olivarum), is the name applied to "the hill that is over
against Jerusalem" (1 Kings 11:7), that is, "on the east side of the city"
(Ezekiel 11:23), beyond the torrent Cedron (2 Samuel 15:23, 30), "a sabbath
day's journey" from the city (Acts 1:12). The passages of the books of the Kings
show the high antiquity of the name, undoubtedly suggested by the groves of
olive trees which flourished there, traces of which still remain. In the Middle
Ages it was called by Arabic writers: Tur ez-Zeitun, Tur Zeita, or Jebel Tur
Zeitun, of which the modern name, Jebel et-Tur, appears to be an abbreviation.
Mt. Olivet is not so much a hill as a range of hills separated by low
depressions. The range includes, from N. to S., the Ras el-Musharif (Scopus;
2686 ft. above the sea-level), Ras el-Madbase (2690 ft.) and Ras et-Te la cah
(2663 ft.); south of the latter, between the old and the new road from Jerusalem
to Jericho, is the Jebel et-Tur, or Mt. Olivet proper, rising in three summits
called by Christians, respectively: the Men of Galilee (Karem es-Sayyad, "the
vineyard of the hunter", 2732 ft.), the Ascension (on which the village Kafr et-Tur
is built), and the Prophets, a spur of the preceding owing its name to the old
rock-tombs known as the Tombs of the Prophets; south-west of the new road to
Jericho, the range terminates in the Jebel Batn el-Hawa, called by Christians
the Mount of Offence, tradition locating there Solomon's idolatrous shrines (2
Kings 23:13).
Mt. Olivet has been the scene of many famous events of Biblical history. In
David's time there was there a holy place dedicated to Yahweh; its exact
location is not known; but it was near the road to the Jordan, possibly on the
summit of the Karem es-Sayyad (2 Samuel 15:32). The site of the village of
Bahurim (2 Samuel 3:16) lay no doubt on the same road. We have already mentioned
the tradition pointing to the Jebel Batn el-Hawa as the place where Solomon
erected his idolatrous shrines destroyed by Josias (1 Kings 11:7; 2 Kings
23:13); this identification is supported by the Targum which suggests in 2 Kings
23:13, the reading "Mount of Oil", a good synonym of Mt. Olivet, instead of the
traditional "Mount of Offence", found nowhere else. Accordingly the idolatrous
sanctuaries were on the south side of Mt. Olivet proper. Finally we learn from
the Jewish rabbis that the Mount of Oil was the traditional place for
sacrificing the red heifer (Numbers 19; cf. Maimonodes, "Treat. of the red
heifer", 3:1). But to Christians especially is Mt. Olivet a most hallowed place,
because it was, during the last days of Our Lord's public life, the preferred
resort of the Saviour. In connection therewith several spots are singled out in
the Gospels: Bethania, the home of Lazarus and of Simon the Leper (Mark 14:3;
Matthew 26:6); Bethphage, whence started the triumphal procession to Jerusalem
(Matthew 21:1), identified with some probability by Federlin with the ruins
called Habalat el-Amira or Kehf Abu Layan; the site of the Franciscan Chapel of
Bethphage, about 1 mile west of El-Azariyeh, is not well chosen; the place where
the fig-tree cursed by Our Lord stood (Matthew 21:18-22; Mark 11:12-14; 20-21);
the spot where Jesus wept over Jerusalem (Luke 19:41); the site where He
prophesied the destruction of the Temple, the ruin of the city and the end of
the world (Matthew 24:1 sqq.); the Garden of Gethsemani; lastly the place where
the Lord imparted His farewell blessing to the Apostles and ascended into heaven
(Luke 24:50-51). All these spots the piety of Christian ages has, with more or
less success, endeavoured to locate and to consecrate by erecting sanctuaries
thereon.
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