The journeys  made during His public life may be grouped under nine heads: the first  six were mainly  performed in Galilee and had Capharnaum for their central point; the  last three bring  Jesus into Judea without any pronounced central point. We cannot enter  into the  disputed questions connected with the single incidents of the various  groups.
1. First Journey.
December, A.U.C. 778 - Spring,  779. (Cf. John 1:2; Matthew 3:4; Mark 1; Luke 3:4) Jesus abandons His hidden life in  Nazareth, and goes to Bethania across the Jordan, where He is baptized by John and  receives the Baptist's first testimony to His Divine mission. He then withdraws into  the desert of Judea, where He fasts for forty days and is tempted by the devil. After  this He dwells in the neighbourhood of the Baptist's ministry, and receives the  latter's second and third testimony; here too He wins His first disciples, with whom He journeys  to the wedding feast at Cana in Galilee, where He performs His first miracle.  Finally He transfers His residence, so far as there can be question of a residence in His  public life, to Capharnaum, one of the principal thoroughfares of commerce and  travel in Galilee.
2. Second Journey.
Passover,  A.U.C. 779 - about Pentecost, 780. (Cf. John 2-5; Mark 1-3; Luke 4-7;  Matthew 4-9)  Jesus goes from  Capharnaum to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover; here he expels the buyers and sellers from  the Temple, and is questioned by the Jewish authorities. Many believed in  Jesus, and Nicodemus came to converse with Him during the night. After the festival days  He remained in Judea till about the following December, during which period He  received the fourth testimony from John who was baptizing at Ennon (A.V. Aenon).  When the Baptist had been imprisoned in Machaerus, Jesus returned to Galilee by way of Samaria  where He met the Samaritan woman at Jacob's well near Sichar; He delayed two days in  this place, and many believed in  Him. Soon after His return into Galilee we find Jesus again in Cana,  where He heard the  prayer who pleaded for the recovery of his dying son in Capharnaum.  The rejection  of Jesus by the people of Nazareth, whether at this time as, St. Luke  intimates, or  at a later period, as St. Mark seems to demand, or again both now and  about eight  months later, is an exegetical problem we cannot solve here. At any  rate, shortly  afterwards Jesus is mostly actively engaged in Capharnaum in teaching  and healing the  sick, restoring among others Peter's mother-in-law and a demoniac. On  this occasion He  called Peter and Andrew, James and John. Then followed a missionary  tour through  Galilee during which Jesus cured a leper; soon he again taught in  Capharnaum, and  was surrounded by such a multitude that a man sick of the palsy had  to be let down  through the roof in order to reach the Sacred Presence. After calling  Matthew to the  Apostleship, He went to Jerusalem for the second pasch occurring during His public life, it was on  this occasion that He healed the man who been sick for thirty-eight years near the pool  at Jerusalem. The charge of violating the Sabbath and Christ's answer were the natural  effects of the miracle. The same charge is repeated shortly after the pasch; Jesus had  returned to Galilee, and the disciples plucked some ripe ears in the corn fields. The  question became more acute in the immediate future; Jesus had returned to Capharnaum,  and there healed on the Sabbath day a man who had a withered hand. The Pharisees  now make common cause with the Herodians in order to "destroy him". Jesus  withdraws first to the Sea of Galilee, where He teaches and performs numerous miracles;  then retires to the Mountain of Beatitudes, where He prays during the night, chooses  His Twelve Apostles in the morning, and preaches the Sermon on the Mount. He is brought  back to Capharnaum by the prayers of the centurion who asks and obtains the  of his servant.
3. Third Journey.
About  Pentecost, A.U.C. 780- Autumn, 780. (Cf. Luke 7:8; Mark 3:4; Matthew 4,  8, 9, 12, 13)  Jesus makes  another missionary tour through Galilee; He resuscitates the son of the  widow at Naim,  and shortly afterwards receives the messengers sent by John from his  prison in  Machaerus. Then follows the scene of the merciful reception of the  sinful woman who  anoints the feet of the Lord while He rests at table in Magdala or  perhaps in Capharnaum;  for the rest of His missionary tour Jesus is followed by a band of pious  women who  minister to the wants of the Apostles. After returning to Capharnaum,  Jesus expels  the mute devil, is charged by the Pharisees with casting out devils by  the prince of  devils, and encounters the remonstrances of His kinsmen. Withdrawing to  the sea, He  preaches what may be called the "Lake Sermon", consisting of seven  parables.
4. Fourth Journey.
Autumn, A.U.C. 780- about  Passover, 781. (Cf. Luke 8:9; Mark 4-6; Matthew 8, 9, 10, 13, 14) After a laborious day of ministry  in the city of Capharnaum and on the lake, Jesus with His Apostles crosses the waters.  As a great storm overtakes them, the frightened Apostles awaken their sleeping  Master, Who commands the winds and the waves. Towards morning they meet in the  country of the Gerasens, on the east of the lake, two demoniacs. Jesus expels the  evil spirits, but allows them to enter into a herd of swine. The beasts destroy  themselves in the waters of the lake, and frightened inhabitants beg Jesus not to  remain among them. After returning to Capharnaum he heals the woman who had touched  the hem of His garment, resuscitates the daughter of Jairus, and gives sight to two  blind men. The second Gospel places here Christ's last visit to and rejection by the  people of Nazareth. Then follows the ministry of the Apostles who are sent two by two,  while Jesus Himself makes another missionary tour through Galilee. It seems to have  been the martyrdom of John the Baptist that occasioned the return of the  Apostles and their gathering around the Master in Capharnaum. But, however  depressing this event may have been, it did not damp the enthusiasm of the Apostles over  their success.

5. Fifth Journey.
Spring, A.U.C. 781. (Cf. John 6;  Luke 9; Mark 6; and Matthew 14) Jesus invites the Apostles, tired out from their missionary  labours, to rest awhile. They cross the northern part of the Sea of Galilee, but, instead  of finding the desired solitude, they are met by multitudes of people who had  preceded them by land or by boat, and who were eager for instruction. Jesus taught them  throughout the day, and towards evening did not wish to dismiss them hungry. On the  other hand, there were only five loaves and two fishes at the disposal of Jesus;  after His blessing, these scanty supplies satisfied the hunger of five thousand men, besides  women and children, and remnants filled twelve baskets of fragments. Jesus sent the  Apostles back to their boats, and escaped from the enthusiastic multitudes, who  wished to make Him king, into the mountain where He prayed till far into the night.  Meanwhile the Apostles were facing a contrary wind till the fourth watch in the  morning, when they saw Jesus walking upon the waters. The Apostles first fear, and then  recognize Jesus; Peter walks upon the water as long as his confidence lasts; the storm  ceases when Jesus has entered the boat. The next day brings Jesus and His Apostles to  Capharnaum, where He speaks to the assembly about the Bread of Life and promises the  Holy Eucharist, with the result that some of His followers leave Him, while the  faith of His true disciples is strenghened.
6. Sixth Journey.
About May,  A.U.C. 781- Sept., 781. (Cf. Luke 9; Mark 7-9; Matthew 14-18; John 7)  It may be owing  to the enmity stirred up against Jesus by His Eucharistic discourse in  Capharnaum that  He began now a more extensive missionary tour than He had made in  the preceding  years of His life. Passing through the country of Genesar, He expressed  His disapproval  of the Pharisaic practices of legal purity. Within the boarders of Tyre  and Sidon He  exorcized the daughter of the Syrophoenician woman. From here Jesus  travelled first  towards the north, then towards the east, then south-eastward through  the northern  part of Decapolis, probably along the foot of the Labanon, till He came  to the eastern  part of Galilee. While in Decapolis Jesus healed a deaf-mute, employing a  ceremonial more  elaborate than He had used at any of His previous miracles; in the  eastern part of  Galilee, probably not far from Dalmanutha and Magedan, He fed four  thousand men,  besides children and women, with seven loaves and a few little fishes,  the remaining  fragments filling seven baskets. The multitudes had listened for three  days to the  teaching of Jesus, previously to the miracle. In spite of the many cures  performed by  Jesus, during this journey, on the blind, the dumb, the lame, the  maimed, and on many  others, the Pharisees and Sadduces asked Him for a sign from heaven,  tempting Him.  He promised them the sign of Jonas the Prophet. After Jesus and the  Apostles had  crossed the lake, He warned them to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees; then they passed  through Bethsaida Julias where Jesus gave sight to a blind man. Next we find Jesus in the  confines of Caesarea Philippi, where Peter professes his faith in Christ, the Son of the  living God, and in his turn receives from Jesus the promise of the power of the keys.  Jesus here predicts His passion, and about a week later is transfigured before  Peter, James, and John, probably on the top of Mt. Thabor. On descending from the mountain,  Jesus exorcizes the mute devil whom His disciples had not been able to expel.  Bending his way towards Capharnaum, Jesus predicts His Passion for the second time, and  in the city pays the tribute-money for Himself and Peter. This occasions the  discussion as to the greater in the kingdom of heaven, and the allied discourses. Finally,  Jesus refuses His brethren's invitation to go publicly to the Feast of Tabernacles in  Jerusalem.
7. Seventh Journey.
Sept., A.U.C. 781- December, 781.  (Cf. Luke 9-13; Mark 10; Matthew 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 24; John 7-10) Jesus now "steadfastly set His  face to go Jerusalem", and as the Samaritans refused Him hospitality, He had to take  the east of the Jordan. While still in Galilee, He refused the discipleship of several  half-hearted candidates, and about the same time He sent other seventy-two, two by two,  before His face into every city and place whither He Himself was to come. Probably in  the lower part of Peraea, the seventy-two returned with joy, rejoicing in the  miraculous power that had been exercised by them. It must have been in the vicinity of  Jericho that Jesus answered the lawer's question, "Who is my neighbour?" by the parable of  the Good Samaritan. Next Jesus was received in the hospitable home of Mary and  Martha, where He declares Mary to have chosen the better part. From Bethania went to  Jerusalem for the Feast of Tabernacles, where he became involved in discussions  with the Jews. The Scribes and Pharisees endeavoured to catch Him in the sentence which  they asked Him to pronounce in the case of the woman taken in adultary. When  Jesus had avoided this snare, He continued His discussions with the hostile Jews.  Their enmity was intensified because Jesus restored sight to a blind man on the  Sabbath day. Jesus appears to have His stay in Jerusalem with the beautiful discourse on  the Good Shepherd. A little later He teaches His Apostles the Our Father, probably  somewhere on Mt. Olivet. On a subsequent missionary tour through Judea and  Peraea He defends Himself against the charges of Pharisees, and reproves their  hypocrisy. On the same journey Jesus warned against hypocrisy, covetousness, worldly  care; He exhorted to watchfulness, patience under contradictions, and to penance.  About this time, too, He healed the woman who had the spirit of infirmity
8. Eighth Journey.
December, A.U.C. 781-February,  782. (Cf. Luke 13-17; John 10:11) The Feast of Dedication brought Jesus again to Jerusalem,  and occasioned another discussion with  the Jews. This is followed by another missionary tour through Peraea,  during which  Jesus explained a number of important points of doctrine: the number of  the elect, the  choice of one's place at table, the guests to be invited, the parable of  the great supper,  resoluteness in the service of God, the parables of the hundred sheep,  the lost groat, and  the prodigal son, of the unjust steward, of Dives and Lazarus, of the  unmerciful  servant, besides the duty of fraternal correction, and the efficacy of  faith. During this  period, too, the Pharisees attempted to frighten Jesus with the menance  of Herod's  persecution; on his part, Jesus healed a man who had drospy, on a  Sabbath day, while at  table in the house of a certain prince of the Pharisees. Finally Mary  and Martha send  messengers to Jesus, asking Him to come and cure their brother Lazarus;  Jesus went  after two days, and resuscitated His friend who had been several days in  the grave. The Jews  are exasperated over this miracle, and they decree Jesus must die for  the people.  Hence He withdrew "into a country near the desert, unto a city that is  called Ephrem".
9. Ninth Journey.
February, A.U.C. 782- Passover,  782. (Cf. Luke, xvii-xxii; Mark., x, xiv; Matt., xixxxvi; John, xi, xii.) This last journey took Jesus from  Ephrem northward through Samaria, then eastward along the border of Galilee into  Peraea, then southward through Peraea, westward across the Jordan, through  Jericho, Bethania on Mt. Olivet, Bethphage, and finally to Jerusalem. While in the most  northern part of the journey, He cured ten lepers; a little
later, He  answered the questions raised by the Pharisees concerning the kingdom of  God. Then He  urged the need of incessant prayer by proposing the parable of the  unjust judge;  here too belong the parable of the Pharisee and Publican, the discourse  on marriage, on  the attitude of the Church towards the children, on the right use of  riches as  illustrated by the story of the rich young ruler, and the parable of the  labourers in  the vineyard. After beginning His route towards Jerusalem, He predicted  His Passion for  the third time; James and John betray their ambition, but they are  taught the true  standard of greatness in the Church. At Jericho Jesus heals two blind  men, and  receives the repentance of Zacheus the publican; here He proposed also  the parable of the  pounds entrusted to the servants by the master. Six days before the  pasch we find  Jesus at Bethania on Mt. Olivet, as the guest of Simon the leper; Mary  anoints His  feet, and the disciples at the instigation of Judas are indignant at  this seeming waste  of ointment. A great multitude assembles at Bethania, not to see Jesus  only but also  Lazarus; hence the chief priests think of killing Lazarus too. On the  following day  Jesus solemnly entered Jerusalem and was received by the Hosanna cries  of all classes  of people. In the afternoon He met a delegation of Gentiles in the court  of the Temple. On  Monday Jesus curses the barren fig tree, and during the morning He  drives the  buyers and sellers from the Temple. On Tuesday the wonder of the  disciples at the sudden  withering of the fig tree provokes their Master's instruction on the  efficacy of  faith. Jesus answers the enemies' questions as to His authority; then He  proposes the  parable of the two sons, of the wicked husbandmen, and of the marriage  feast. Next  follows a triple snare: the politicians ask whether it is lawful to pay  tribute to Caesar; the  scoffers inquire whose wife a woman, who has had several husbands,  will be after  ressurection; the Jewish theologians propose the question: Which is the  first  commandment, the great commandment of the law? Then Jesus proposes His  last question to the  Jews: "What think you of Christ? whose son is he?" This is followed by  the eightfold  woe against the Scribes and Pharisees, and by the denunciation of  Jerusalem. The  last words of Christ in the Temple were expressions of praise for the  poor widow who  had made an offering of two mites in spite of her poverty. Jesus ended this day by uttering the  prophecies concerning the destruction of Jerusalem, His second coming, and the future  judgement; these predictions are interrupted by the parable of the ten virgins and the  talents. On Wednesday Jesus again predicted His Passion; probably it was on the  same day that Judas made his agreement with the Jews to betray Jesus.
 

 
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