Gethsemane in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(an oil-press), a small "farm," Mt 26:36; Mr 14:32 situated
across the brook Kedron Joh 18:1 probably at the foot of
Mount Olivet, Lu 22:39 to the northwest and about one-half
or three quarters of a mile English from the walls of
Jerusalem, and 100 yards east of the bridge over the Kedron.
There was a "garden," or rather orchard, attached to it, to
which the olive, fig and pomegranate doubtless invited
resort by their hospitable shade. And we know from the
evangelists Lu 22:39 And Joh 18:2 that our Lord ofttimes
resorted thither with his disciples. But Gethsemane has not
come down to us as a scene of mirth; its inexhaustible
associations are the offspring of a single event--the agony
of the Son of God on the evening preceding his passion. A
garden, with eight venerable olive trees, and a grotto to
the north detached from it, and in closer connection with
the church of the sepulchre of the Virgin, are pointed out
as the Gethsemane. Against the contemporary antiquity of the
olive trees it has been urged that Titus cut down all the
trees about Jerusalem. The probability would seem to be that
they were planted by Christian hands to mark the spot
unless, like the sacred olive of the Acropolis, they may
have reproduced themselves.
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