
In the dusty heat of Galilee’s Great Year, a lone rider named Obil appears on the horizon, his caravan of camels and horses trailing through salt‑sprayed plains. Known across towns from Ptolemais to Jerusalem, he is whispered about as both a miracle‑worker and a shadowy figure tied to ancient powers. When the disciples confront Jesus about a man casting out demons in his name yet walking apart from them, Obil’s name surfaces, hinting at a deeper, unspoken bond with the divine.
The narrative pulls back to reveal a quieter side of the camel keeper: a devoted husband to Miriam, a man who tends humble fields and lights Sabbath candles brighter than any neighbor’s. His lineage traces to the legendary Ishmaelite keepers of King David’s camels, a wild desert blood that stirs an ever‑present wanderlust. As rumors swirl—some casting him as a tool of priests, others as a solitary guardian of a hidden treasure—Obil’s true purpose remains a mystery, inviting listeners to explore faith, loyalty, and the cost of quiet heroism.
Full title
Obil, Keeper of Camels Being the parable of the man whom the disciples saw casting out devils
Language
en
Duration
~28 minutes (26K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2016-01-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
An early 20th-century writer whose surviving work ranges from adventurous family reading to a short religious parable set in the desert. Her books suggest a taste for travel, moral storytelling, and vivid settings that still feel distinctive today.
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