Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Off to Jerusalem


 3/23 Day +3 on our way to Jerusalem we stop first at Beth Shean a 7,000 year old site.  It is an excellent example of Roman architecture.  The University of Pennsylvania has been digging here for years and have uncovered 10% of the site.  It is suggested that if the Garden of Eden was in Israel it would have been at this place because as we move south we go into the Judean dessert. (Named after the tribe of Judah)


Jericho, 10,000 years old.  It is a Palestinian city. It is an Oasis in the middle of the Judean dessert. There is a natural spring here.  They have never found the walls of Jericho so really unsure if this is really Jericho.  Only thing that really matters is that it did exist.  That is the same with everyother site.  We take a cable car up to the Mount of Temptation and the Quarantal Monastery.

There is a Greek Orthodox monastery at the top of the hill where they think they found the cave where Jesus fasted for 40 days and 40 nights.


During the fast Jesus was tempted by the devil.  They beleive this is the rock.


We overlook the old city of Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives.  The Jewish people beleive this is where the redemption will be held.  The Christians beleive the Lords Prayer was first said here and that Christ ascended into heaven from Mount Olive. 


This is the Garden of Gethsemane.  This is the only site that is exactly the same as the time of Christ.

The Byzantines built the Church of the Agony.
 


Enjoying some Israeli wines.  Anyone recognize the label?

3/24 Day 4
Off to Masada, the Dead Sea and a Bedouin Camp

Stop at Qumran where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found.  This was the home of the Essenes, a monastic order who transcribed the oral gospel onto leather and papyrus and copper.  The Dead Sea scrolls were found in 1946 by a Bedouin and sold to a shoe maker in Israel for $25.  The shoe maker was also an archeology scholar and he recognized the Greek symbols.  They ended up at the Metropolitan museum but were sold again to an Israeli for $250,000 and brought back to Israel.
 The cave where the scrolls were found.
Some of my travel buddies.

Masada was the winter home of King Herod in 42 BC.  It was also the home of Elazar Ben Yair and where 960 Jews committed mass suicide instead of surrendering to the Romans in 73CE.  You ask why they didn't defend themselves.  The Romans brought with them 15,000 slaves who were Jewish to build a  500 foot ramp to get up to the main gate to seige the fort.  These were their brothers and they could not kill a brother.  This is one of Israel's most important historical sites.
King Herod built 23 storerooms so they could live indefinetly in these mountains.
This is a replica of Herods palace
Baths
So 10 people killed everyone there and then 1 guy killed the other 9 and then he committed suicide.  

The Judean dessert surrounding the palace.

Our group
 We stopped at the Dead Sea for lunch and a float and a little mud bath.

We visit a Beduoin Camp for camel rides and dinner.  


This camp is actually a tourist spot run by Beduoins.  No one lives here but there were a number of tourist who were spending the night.  They had mats laid out for sleeping.  50 people to a tent😝

3/25 Day 5. We stop at the Museum of Israel to see the a model of the city of Jerusalem in 66 CE before it was destroyed by the Romans.  It is estimated that 30,000 people lived in Jerusalem at this time.

From this picture you can see where Christ was sentenced to die (the big building) and the gate he carried his cross to Calvary and a small stone that looks like a skull head represents where he was crucified.


Then we went to see the Shrine of the Book museum to view the Dead Sea scrolls.
 No pictures allowed inside but here is an outside view.  They keep the temperature of the building constant by spraying  the roof with water.
 
Next we go to Yad Vashem,the Holocaust Museum. The reality hits you so strongly.  

Off to visit Bethlehem, a Palestinian city, known as the birthplace of Jesus and the birthplace of King David.  We visit the Church of the Nativity where Christians believe Mary gave birth to Jesus.  This church is managed by the Greek Orthodox.  It is under refurbishing.
His birthplace.  
The 14 pointed star stands for the three-fold "fourteen generations" of Jesus' genealogy given in the Gospel of Matthew.  Look for the song "Matthew's Begats" by Andrew Peterson.  The entire song is composed of this genealogy.

Scholars believe Jesus was born in 5BC in the spring not the winter.  They put his birth at closer to April than December.  The Christians picked 12/25 as his birth because it is the winter equinox and the pagans worshipped the equinox.  Easier to convert them to Christianity.

Location of the manger in a cave.


A little religion info.  Our tour guide is a Palestinian and Musilim.  Musilims believe in the Old Testament, they believe in Jesus, they believe in the Virgin birth, but they do not believe he was crucified.  They, like the Jews are waiting for the Messiah.  


Day 6 3/27
We walk thru Herods Gate into the old city of Jeruselem and Antonio Fortress.    Via Del Rosa is the way of the cross.   We view the 14 Stations of the Cross.  
Chapel of the Flagalation


Chapel of Condemnation


We enter the Church of the Holy Seplechur which all the religions use to worship but on seperate days.  The keys are held by a Muslim family because they have no vested interest in this Church.
There are three more stations in this church.  The tradition is that Jesus was prepared  for bural on this slab.  Ok , not really.  This stone was brought from Russian and given as a gift by the Russian Orthodox Christians around 1850.  Old Jeruselem was destroyed in 52  CE by the Romans and again in 174 by the Persians so there are really no authentic sites just the suggestion of them.  That's all that matters they believe.

 Believed to be the cave where he was buried.

Tradition says this is the room of the Last Supper and it is built over the tomb of King David.



A visit to the wailing wall where men pray on one side and women on the other


We finish the day with a Turkish coffee and baklava while we wait for our companions who are shopping.

 Tomorrow we head back to PG.  Off to the airport at 4am. 

Happy Easter all.  🐇🐇

3 comments:

  1. Happy Easter to you! And welcome home later today. You will be back in time to celebrate Easter here.
    Safe travels.
    Betty

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  2. Looks like you have had a marvelous trip. Bravo for doing it! Didn't think you were back until later next week. Regardless we will miss you as leaving tomorrow for Truckee. Looking forward to hearing all about it when we return.

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  3. Noreen, Thank you for taking and posting these wonderful pictures and commentary. Your trip looks like it was everything that you had hoped it would be. Betty Sproule

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