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Olivet

6 sources
The Poor Man's Concordance and Dictionary by Robert Hawker (1828)

See Mount Olivet.

Smith's Bible Dictionary by William Smith (1863)

Ol’ivet. (place of olives). 2Sa 15:30; Act 1:12. See Olives, The Mount of.

Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels by James Hastings (1906)

OLIVET.—See Mount of Olives.

Dictionary of the Bible by James Hastings (1909)

OLIVET.—See preceding article.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia by James Orr (ed.) (1915)

ol´i-vet. See OLIVES, MOUNT OF.

Dictionary of the Apostolic Church by James Hastings (1916)

(ὁ ἐëáéþí, Act_1:12; found only here and in Jos. Ant. VII. ix. 2, äéὰ ôïῦ ἐëáéῶíïò ὄñïõò; ôὸ ἐëáéþí in Mar_11:1 is confined to B; Lat. olivetum)

Olivet, called in the Gospels ‘the Mount of Olives,’ is the range of hills facing Jerusalem on the E., beyond the ravine of the Kidron valley. It has three summits, which are now commonly known as ‘Scopus’ (a misnomer, however, the real Scopus being further west), which is about a mile N.E. of the Temple site, ‘the Ascension,’ three-quarters of a mile E. of the same, and ‘the Mount of Offence,’ three-quarters of one mile S.E. of Ophel. The Risen Lord led His disciples not ‘as far as to Bethany’ (Authorized Version ), but ‘until they were over against Bethany’ (Revised Version ), ἕùò ðñὸò (better supported than åἰò) Âçèáíßáí, and there, a Sabbath day’s journey-about six furlongs-from the Holy City, His ascension is recorded to have taken place. Bethany itself was fifteen furlongs-more than twice a Sabbath day’s journey-from Jerusalem (Joh_11:18), and it is unlikely that He wished the solemn parting to take place in the village. Not far from the scene of His agony and betrayal, ‘he was taken up’ (Act_1:9). It was not from Bethany, therefore, but ‘from the mount called Olivet,’ that the disciples returned to Jerusalem (Act_1:12). From early times the traditional spot from which the Lord ascended has been the central summit of the range, on which now stands the Church of the Ascension, built on the ruins of a crusading church of the 12th cent., which itself took the place of a basilica of the time of Constantine. More important than the identification of sites and scenes is the fact that

‘… faith has still its Olivet,

And love its Galilee’

(Whittier, Our Master, i. 51 f.).

Literature.-See Josephus Ant. xx. viii. 6, Bellum Judaicum (Josephus) v. ii. 3; E. Robinson, Biblical Researches in Palestine2, 1856, vol. i. pp. 274 f., 604 f.; A. P. Stanley, Sinai and Palestine, new ed., 1877, pp. 185-195; PEFSt [Note: EFSt Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement.] . 1889, pp. 174-184; W. M. Thomson, The Land and the Book, new ed., 1910, pp. 709-711; articles in Hasting's Dictionary of the Bible (5 vols) and Encyclopaedia Biblica .

James Strahan.

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