Olive Tree in Easton's Bible Dictionary
is frequently mentioned in Scripture. The dove from the ark
brought an olive-branch to Noah (Gen. 8:11). It is
mentioned
among the most notable trees of Israel, where it was
cultivated long before the time of the Hebrews
(Deut. 6:11;
8:8). It is mentioned in the first Old Testament
parable, that
of Jotham (Judg. 9:9), and is named among the
blessings of the
"good land," and is at the present day the one
characteristic
tree of Israel. The oldest olive-trees in the
country are
those which are enclosed in the Garden of
Gethsemane. It is
referred to as an emblem of prosperity and beauty
and religious
privilege (Ps. 52:8; Jer. 11:16; Hos. 14:6). The two
"witnesses"
mentioned in Rev. 11:4 are spoken of as "two olive
trees
standing before the God of the earth." (Comp. Zech.
4:3, 11-14.)
The "olive-tree, wild by nature" (Rom. 11:24), is
the shoot or
cutting of the good olive-tree which, left
ungrafted, grows up
to be a "wild olive." In Rom. 11:17 Paul refers to
the practice
of grafting shoots of the wild olive into a "good"
olive which
has become unfruitful. By such a process the sap of
the good
olive, by pervading the branch which is "graffed
in," makes it a
good branch, bearing good olives. Thus the Gentiles,
being a
"wild olive," but now "graffed in," yield fruit, but
only
through the sap of the tree into which they have
been graffed.
This is a process "contrary to nature" (11:24).
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