Posted on 12/26/2014 1:49:47 PM PST by NYer
Since 2009, archaeologists have been slowly excavating the ancient town of Magdalathought to be the home of Mary Magdalenenear the Sea of Galilee. Among their finds has been a first-century synagogue where, experts say, Jesus likely preached.
Image: Israel Antiquities Authority
Although Jerusalem and Bethlehem are the sites most commonly associated with Jesus, Father Eamon Kellyvice president of Israel's Magdala Center and vice chargé of the Pontifical Institute Notre Dame of Jerusalem Centerpoints out that Jesus spent almost his entire life in what is now northern Israel.
"Eighty percent of Jesus' public life was here," he tells the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
Archaeologists believe the synagogue was built in 1 AD and then upgraded into a more ornate building in 40 AD.
The Romans destroyed the synagogue in 67 or 68 AD, during the First Jewish Revolt. But significant parts of the structure remains intact, including ritual baths and a sculpted limestone block probably used for writing or reading the Torah. Its relief depicts the oldest menorah ever found on stone.
As Haaretz reports:
Experts say it's highly likely that Jesus would have preached in the uncovered synagogue .Until Tiberias was built, the only town on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee was Magdala.
Anyone touring the region, as Jesus did according to the New Testament, teaching and preaching in synagogues all through Galilee, would not have skipped Magdala, located on the Via Maristhe ancient trade route that ran along the Mediterranean and the western shore of the Sea of Galilee all the way from Egypt to Syria.
"He was a clever rabbi. He knew where to set up shop," says Kelly. "If you walk from Nazareth to Bethsaida to Capernaum, you're going to come out here."
Matthew 15:39 also mentions Jesus setting foot there, saying "and he took ship, and came into the coasts of Magdala (sometimes also translated from the Greek as Magadan)."
In the times of Jesus, people would gather in local synagogues to meet and assemble, not just for prayer.
"So if a strange rabbi came to town, a new rabbi, a new preacher, a new teacher, the logical place was to meet here," Kelly says, standing on the two-thousand-year-old stones.
Did Jesus preach at this synagogue? - Video of Site
BookMark
Very cool!
Ping! :-)
Thanks left that other site.
My Pleasure!
This reminds me a lot of Capernaum.
I’ve been watching a program by David souochet (Poirot) called “In the footsepts of St. Peter”. Souchet takes us through all of those sites and discussed the lives of the people who lived there at the time of St. Peter and Jesus.
The question arises — is the Sea of Gallilee salt water, or fresh water?
That is seriously exciting!
Interesting.
Sacred Journeys playing on PBS has a stirring episode on Lourdes and one on Jerusalem that has a life of Jesus trek.
Very exciting, thanks!
According to wiki the Sea of Galilee is the largest freshwater lake in Israel.
Fascinating. Thank you.
Amazing find.
This is too awesome.
I’ve been to that excavation site twice in the past two years. Pretty cool.
Way cool.
Awesome
Fresh water. The lake is the source of the Jordan river and drains into the dead Sea at a much reduced elevation
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