On our third day in Israel, we had a low key morning. Many of us visited a museum to see a 2,000 year-old fishing boat excavated from the Sea of Galilee.
The boat is similar to the boat that would have been used by Peter, Andrew, James and John. In the afternoon, we traveled to the Arbel cliff and enjoyed a magnificent view of the Sea of Galilee. Later, we traveled by boat on the Sea of Galilee to mass at a church in Tiberius. While we were on the sea, we recalled how Jesus prayed along on the Golan Heights after learning that John the Baptist had been beheaded until about 3 in the morning. When he was ready to return to Capernaum, he walked on the water to reach the disciples in their boat. He would have had the moon at his back, the wind would have been blowing hard through the Arbel pass and his robes would have been flying around him. To the disciples, he would have looked like a ghost.
Our fourth day took us south to Nazareth, where we visited the Church of Mary’s Well, a very old and ornate church with a spring of running water at the rear of the sanctuary. We also visited the brow of the cliff where the Jews of Nazareth threatened to throw Jesus over the cliff for his teachings. We traveled to Caesarea on the Mediterranean coast, a Roman deep water seaport build by Herod the Great and occupied by the Tenth Roman Legion. The ruins are spectacular. They include a hippodrome, an amphitheater where Herod Agrippa collapsed and later died (having been “eaten by worms”) and a royal palace. Herod the Great constructed a sea wall to prevent the port from filing in with silt. The presence of a seaport at Caesarea meant that Egypt could ship its produce from Caesarea instead of traveling further north to Tyre, which created some conflict with Tyre.
From Caesarea, we traveled to Jerusalem, arriving in the evening. We stopped briefly for a welcoming ceremony and prayer before checking into our very elegant hotel, the Inbal.
On day five, we went to the Mount of Olives, where we visited Dominus Flavit (literally, “Jesus wept”), a church which memorializes Jesus’s weeping over the city of Jerusalem. The church is shaped like a tear drop and has a beautiful window that looks out over the old city of Jerusalem, including the Dome of the Rock.. From there we visited the Church of all Nations, a somber church that memorializes the dark time of Jesus’s crucifixion and has a thorn of crowns sculpture that surrounds the altar. We had quiet time in the Garden of Gethsemane, which was really special. In the afternoon we traveled the Via Dolorosa and visited the Church of the Holy Sepulcher which contains traditions sites of the crucifixion and burial of Jesus. That evening a small group of us shopped on our own in the old city and practiced our bargaining skills. We think we did quite well!