The Cross and the Winepress.
As I was meditating upon these words
or thoughts of Jesus when hanging on the Cross:
’I am pressed like wine placed here under the
press for the first time; my blood must continue to
flow until water comes, but wine shall no more be
made here,’ an explanation was given me by means
of another vision relating to Calvary.
I saw this rocky country at a period
anterior to the Deluge; it was then less wild and
less barren than it afterwards became, and was laid
out in vineyards and fields. I saw there the Patriarch
Japhet, a majestic dark-complexioned old man, surrounded
by immense flocks and herds and a numerous posterity:
his children as well as himself had dwellings excavated
in the ground, and covered with turf roofs, on which
herbs and flowers were growing. There were vines
all around, and a new method of making wine was being
tried on Calvary, in the presence of Japhet.
I saw also the ancient method of preparing wine, but
I can give only the following description of it.
At first men were satisfied with only eating the grapes;
then they pressed them with pestles in hollow stones,
and finally in large wooden trenches. Upon this
occasion a new wine-press, resembling the holy Cross
in shape, had been devised; it consisted of the hollow
trunk of a tree placed upright, with a bag of grapes
suspended over it. Upon this bag there was fastened
a pestle, surmounted by a weight; and on both sides
of the trunk were arms joined to the bag, through
openings made for the purpose, and which, when put
in motion by lowering the ends, crushed the grapes.
The juice flowed out of the tree by five openings,
and fell into a stone vat, from whence it flowed through
a channel made of bark and coated with resin, into
the species of cistern excavated in the rock where
Jesus was confined before his Crucifixion. At
the foot of the winepress, in the stone vat, there
was a sort of sieve to stop the skins, which were put
on one side. When they had made their winepress,
they filled the bag with grapes, nailed it to the
top of the trunk, placed the pestle, and put in motion
the side arms, in order to make the wine flow.
All this very strongly reminded me of the Crucifixion,
on account of the resemblance between the winepress
and the Cross. They had a long reed, at the end
of which there were points, so that it looked like
an enormous thistle, and they ran this through the
channel and trunk of the tree when there was any obstruction.
I was reminded of the lance and sponge. There
were also some leathern bottles, and vases made of
bark and plastered with resin. I saw several young
men, with nothing but a cloth wrapped round their
loins like Jesus, working at this winepress.
Japhet was very old; he wore a long beard, and a dress
made of the skins of beasts; and he looked at the
new winepress with evident satisfaction. It was
a festival day, and they sacrificed on a stone altar
some animals which were running loose in the vineyard,
young asses, goats, and sheep. It was not in
this place that Abraham came to sacrifice Isaac; perhaps
it was on Mount Moriah. I have forgotten many
of the instructions regarding the wine, vinegar, and
skins, and the different ways in which everything
was to be distributed to the right and to the left;
and I regret it, because the veriest trifles in these
matters have a profound symbolical meaning. If
it should be the will of God for me to make them known,
he will show them to me again.