Your Faith Has Made You Well…

Tuesday was our day visiting the sites around the Sea of Galilee.  On this day, all our places were extremely close to each other.  This was the area centrally located around Capernaum, Jesus’ home, that acted as a type of head quarters for his miracles and most of his teaching.  The places we visited today: Church of the Beatitudes, the Church of the Multiplication, The Primacy of Peter, Capernaum, Magdala, a lunch on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, a boat ride on the Sea of Galilee, and a drive around the sea with a final stop at the Jordan River.

Magdala is a city that I was not familiar with.  It was only excavated in 2006 and is thought to be the home town of Mary Magdalene.  It was a fishing village on the edge of the Sea of Galilee and just North of Tiberius.  There is a beautiful modern Roman Catholic church on the edge of the shore line.  Down in the basement of this building is a small chapel where the floor is rough, jagged, uneven rock pavers.  This floor is the actual road pavers that ran through the village that Jesus would have walked! If that was not enough, although they have not officially declared (they are heavily suggesting), this is the city and road from Mark 5:25-34 in which Jesus healed a woman who reached out to him touching his robe in the crowd.  Jesus, upon feeling power leave him, tells the woman, “Daughter, your faith has made you well.” I made sure to get a picture with my feet on the pavers.

The rest of the places were all familiar and yet I vastly underestimated what it would feel like being there.  The Church of the Beatitudes was of course where Jesus gave the Sermon on the Mount.  What struck me, besides the view of the sea, was that from this spot you can see some distant mountain cliffs (which I have pictured).  In these cliffs, the zealots would hide in the caves while plotting their rebellion.  It is said that in this spot, at the time of the sermon, tensions were of course rising between the opposing forces, and it would not have been uncommon to hear forgers hammering out swords, weapons, and armor preparing for the coming war.  With that as the backdrop, Jesus boldly proclaims, “Blessed are the Peacemakers”! That revolutionary thought standing in the face of the rising zealot movement had never sunk in before.

The Primacy of Peter is the location where the events of John chapter 21 take place.  It is the beach shore where Jesus eats fish and breaks bread with his disciples and has that most beautiful conversation and commissioning of St. Peter.  While we were there, in a outdoor side chapel, a group of pilgrims were celebrating the Holy Eucharist.  It was moving and emotional to be at the location, where through the breaking of the bread, Christ is revealed to his disciples. To be at the Mesna Christi (the Table of Christ) in the midst of the same breaking of the bread and the presence of Christ was incredible.

We stopped at the river Jordan for a quick dip…ok more of a wade I guess.  Where we stopped was only a couple hundred yards from where it empties from the Sea of Galilee.  While this was not the spot of Christ’s Baptism it was still a great location because at this spot an incredible baptism venue has been built for pilgrims and local congregations to use.  The day we were there we witnessed no less than 20 baptisms!! In the words of Ben Harper, we were “blessed to be a witness.”

Lastly, the site of the Multiplication, the site of the feeding of the 5000 was probably the most moving.  If you look under the altar (pictured below) you can see a rock coming out of the ground. That rock it is said to be the spot where Christ: took, blessed, broke, and gave the fishes and loaves to the crowds gathered.  I often say that if the Last Supper is truly the last supper then the Feeding of the 5000 would be the first.  My call and discernment to the priesthood has been closely tied to a deep piety I have for the Eucharist.  Being in this place I felt encouragement and strengthened for the ministry to which God has called me.

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Standing on the actual road in Magdala where Christ would have walked.
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The view from the Church of the Beatitudes look to the cliffs where zealots hid out.
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From the boat ride on the Sea of Galilee.  First off yes that is the color of the water and not a filter (The sun was hitting it just right). If you look almost dead center you will see a gray building on the shore line with a red roof and a small steeple to the right end.  That is the Church of the Primacy of St. Peter.  Then moving to the left almost 3 buildings you can see the Church of the Multiplication.  The Church of the Beatitudes is the green domed building in the bunch of trees half way up the hill.
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A sculpture at the Church of the Primacy of St. Peter
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In the Church of the Primacy of St. Peter.  Mensa Christi is “The Table of Christ”; this is the site where Jesus shared breakfast with the disciples after the Resurection.
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The truly breathtaking Church of the Multiplication.  You can see pilgrims from all over the world, all denominations here praying.  You can zoom in under the altar and see the rock Christ stood on during the feeding of the 5000.

 

5 thoughts on “Your Faith Has Made You Well…

  1. Loving it that you are so intentionally sharing your thoughts from your pilgrimage. Looking forward to tomorrow’s installment.

    Looking at the pictures reminded me of thoughts that I had when there, especially about both the Sea of Galilee (how long and narrow it was – – a long lake and not the sea at all) and the Jordan River (again how narrow, more like a small bayou).

    Seeing and experiencing the holy land up close and personal is impossible to express adequately in words. Pax.

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  2. How awesome all this is. I love the reference you make to Bible and what actually happened so long ago. It makes it some much up close and personal. Thanks for sharing and thanks for the pictures and your insight. I look forward to your next post

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  3. Michael your pictures are spectacular! Your sharing brings tears to my eyes. I can not even amazing the feeling of being there…..

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