Basilica of the Annunciation This trip has been quite biblical. Our first stop was Nazareth, which is now an “Arab” city (meaning around 80% residents are Arabs) within Israel. But this was the place Jesus was conceived. According to the Bible, the angel Gabriel was sent by God to inform the Virgin Mary the second time (the first time was near the well up in the mountain) that she will be pregnant and bear a son Jesus, who will be called the Son of the most High. There is a relatively new church called Basilica of the Annunciation, which is the biggest church in the Middle East. It was built on top of Mary and Joseph’s house in an ancient Jewish village. Inside, the footsteps of history are revealed by mosaic floors of Byzantine church remains and those of the Crusaders' time. The most remarkable are the mosaic paintings of Mary sent by different countries: the Korean painted Mary with the blue-white traditional Korean lobes; the Chinese Mary looks like an Emperor's concubine; the American's is a modern abstract; Spain sent three different paintings, etc. I guess the point is that Mary belongs to everyone around the world, and takes the shapes and sizes of that culture.
CanaThis was the place where Jesus performed the first miracle: transforming water to wine. Legend says that Jesus attended a wedding with his mother Mary and his disciples. Towards the end, they ran out of wine. Mary insisted that Jesus should help while Jesus was a little reluctant to reveal himself. In the end, he did turn water into wine. Back then people usually serve good wine before bad ones. So this was quite a surprise. There are two churches commemorating this event, a Franciscan one and a Greek-Orthodox one, both claim they are the authentic site. I guess it is not just in science; even in Christianity people fought for credit. Bill Mobley asked “what is the nature of evidence that the miracle site is actually here”. The answer was a bit surprising: it was the mother of Constantine (the Eastern Roman ruler in the Byzantine time, around 300 AC) who authenticated most of these sites, based largely on word of mouth around that time. The universal principle is that “whatever people believe is the truth”.
JordanianRiverThe River originates from the south end of the Sea of Galilee, and runs towards the Dead Sea. This was where Jesus was baptized by John. It is completely unremarkable. As the Chinese saying: 山不在高, 有仙则灵.
CapernaumThis is located in the northern tip of the Sea of Galilee. There are all together three Jewish villages, and Capernaum is one of them. Because they are pretty far from Jerusalem, Jesus started his preaching activity here. In Capernaum Jesus did more sermons and performed more miracles than any other place. Because this was a Jewish village, Jesus did most of this preaching in the synagogue, which was of course destroyed. A 2nd century synagogue was built on top. The architecture was very impressive: volcano rocks colored black were used to build the foundation, and the church itself was built by limestone colored white. It is very large, with three doors (a big one in the center and two small ones other side). The column remains looked Greek, but it was already the era of Byzantine. Nearby there is a new church, which is built on top of Peter (a fishman)’s house. Jesus was said to have lived in this house with Peter for many years. There is a fairly modern church built on top of what was known to be Peter’s house.
Ein Tabgha Here again is a relatively modern church, but it was built in a classic Byzantine style: a courtyard outside, followed by a three-section rectangular church. The middle one is tall, with high ceiling and side windows so that sunlight could come in. The two side ones have low ceilings and are separated from the middle one by columns, so that people can come in without disturbing those already in the middle.
Mountain of Beatitude In his life Jesus gave many speeches. I learned that in only those he gave while he was sitting, his disciples were allowed to take notes, which later were developed into the Bible. Thus, words uttered out while sitting could be more powerful than those while standing. According to the Bible, Jesus heard the news that John, one of his first disciples and his cousin, was killed after being in prison. He decided to go to Jerusalem to inspire many more people to Christianity. He and his disciples came here with only five loafs of bread and two fish. Jesus turned one of the loaves to enough food to feed the 5000 hungry following him. The legend says that John was a much more charismatic speaker than Jesus, and he forcefully delivered Christian thoughts and ideology. That was why he arrested and killed much earlier than Jesus. It was here that Jesus gave the famous 8 Beatitudes. There is a relatively new church built on this site called, not surprisingly, the Church of Beatitudes. This octagonal church, set in a well-maintained garden, is not a practical church because it is fairly small. But Jesus did not need a big church, and people can hear him well from outside.