Palestina
East Jerusalem

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Viajantes neste local
    • Dia 8

      Cardo, Jerusalem

      29 de outubro de 2018, Palestina ⋅ 🌙 22 °C

      Der Cardo (griechisch: "Herz"), auch Cardo Maximus, von Jerusalem ist die heute in ihrem südlichen Teil streckenweise freigelegte ehemalige Hauptstraße aus römisch-byzantinischer Zeit. Der Cardo führte vom nördlichen Stadttor, dem heutigen Damaskustor, zum südlichen, dem jetzigen Misttor. Der Begriff Cardo im Allgemeinen bezeichnet die für das Stadtbild einer römischen bzw. byzantinischen Stadt typische, meist in Nord-Süd-Richtung verlaufende Hauptachse. Senkrecht auf dieser Hauptachse wurde oft, wie auch hier, eine in Ost-West-Richtung verlaufende Straße angelegt, der Decumanus, der vom westlichen Stadttor, dem heutigen Jaffator, zum Tempelberg nach Osten führte. Der Kreuzungspunkt dieser Hauptachsen war das Zentrum der Stadt.Leia mais

    • Dia 8

      Jerusalem, Israel

      29 de outubro de 2018, Palestina ⋅ 🌙 22 °C

      Der Tempelberg (hebr. הר הבית Har haBait, arabisch الحرم الشريف al-haram asch-scharif, DMG al-ḥaram aš-šarīf ‚das edle Heiligtum‘) ist ein Hügel im Südostteil der Jerusalemer Altstadt, oberhalb des Kidrontales. Auf seinem Gipfel befindet sich ein künstliches Plateau, auf dem ursprünglich der Jerusalemer Tempel oder Salomonische Tempel und der nachfolgende Herodianische Tempel standen und auf dem sich heute der Felsendom befindet. Auf der südlichen Seite des Tempelberges steht die al-Aqṣā-Moschee. Der Tempelberg ist einer der umstrittensten heiligen Orte der Welt.Leia mais

    • Dia 10

      Gethsemane

      11 de fevereiro de 2022, Palestina ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

      The garden at the foot of the Mount if Olives, across the Kidron Valley from where the temple once stood. This is where Jesus prayed on the night after the last supper and before the crucifixion.
      The 1st picture is taken from the temple side of the valley looking back to Gethsemane. Part of the Garden is now the church with the 4 columns to the right of center. The 2nd and 3rd pictures are of the olive trees in the garden. The oldest of these trees is about 800 years, but olives extend shoots from the roots. So it is possible that some of these trees could be descendants of trees that were here 2,000 years ago.
      The 4th and 5th pictures are in the church in the garden, known variously as the Church of All Nations or the Basilica of the Agony. The 4th picture is in the nave, while the 5th picture looks closer at the chancel. Tradition says that the stone in front of the altar is the stone where Jesus prayed and suffered that night.
      The last picture is the view from Gethsemane to the mount where the temple stood on Jesus' day.
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    • Dia 7

      Jerusalem Part 1

      3 de outubro de 2019, Palestina ⋅ 63 °F

      We started with Steve Rubin, our guide, up on the Mount of Olives so we could see the city of Jerusalem out before us. We then travelled to the Garden of Gethsemene and ate our first Jerusalem pretzels along the way to the Old City. We were fortunate to be permitted through Moor’s Gate, the entrance leading directly to Temple Mount and the Dome of the Rock (built 688 AD). It is often closed and we were subject to a security search with armed guards most everywhere. We were reprimanded by a Muslim guard for touching while taking a picture together, we just didn’t know! A beautiful and holy place for all religions. The Rock inside the Dome is said to be where Abraham was asked to sacrifice Isaac.Leia mais

    • Dia 9

      Pool of Bethesda

      15 de maio de 2019, Palestina ⋅ ☀️ 84 °F

      The Pool of Bethesda is just inside of the Lions Gate. Large excavations exposed the pool. The Pool of Bethesda (which means house of mercy) is mentioned only in John 5:2 where the afflicted came for healing when the waters were troubled. Here Jesus healed the man who had been unable to walk for 38 years. John 5:2-9 says "Now there is in Jerusalem near the Sheep Gate a pool, which in Aramaic is called Bethesda and which is surrounded by five covered colonnades. Here a great number of disabled people used to lie—the blind, the lame, the paralyzed. One who was there had been an invalid for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there and learned that he had been in this condition for a long time, he asked him, “Do you want to get well?” “Sir,” the invalid replied, “I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred. While I am trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me.” Then Jesus said to him, “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk.” At once the man was cured; he picked up his mat and walked."Leia mais

    • Dia 11

      Jerusalem - Garden of Gethsemane

      15 de abril de 2019, Palestina ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      The Garden of Gethsemane is a lovely garden where Jesus liked to go to to pray and where he was praying before he was arrested. There is a church there called "Church of all Nations" as many nations donated money to build it in the 1920's.Leia mais

    • Dia 8

      Western Wall (Wailing Wall)

      14 de maio de 2019, Palestina ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F

      The Western Wall (in Hebrew Kotel) is the last remaining part of the retaining wall erected by Herod the Great in 20 BC for his Temple Mount expansion. It is part of the support for the vast platform on which he rebuilt the Second Temple. The visible wall is 62 feet high with another 50 feet of depth underground. This remaining remnant of the Temple Mount wall is a special place for Judaism because of its proximity to the ancient site of the Holy of Holies. It is a focal point of Jews around the world. The wall area is partitioned between the men's section and the women's section.
      Often petitions and prayers are written down and placed between the huge stones in the wall. It is also called the "Wailing Wall", referring to the practice of Jews weeping at the site over the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD. Since the destruction, Orthodox Jews pray three times a day "May it be Thy will that the temple be speedily rebuilt in our own time". The issue of rebuilding the temple has been at the forefront of the Middle East conflict. Many violent riots have taken place on and around the Temple Mount. Though repeated negotiation attempts have been made by Israelis and Palestinians for terms of the site, the Temple Mount remains the most volatile acreage on earth. I placed a copy of Psalm 125 in a crack of the wall.

      Psalm 125 - A song for pilgrims ascending to Jerusalem.
      Those who trust in the Lord are as secure as Mount Zion;
          they will not be defeated but will endure forever.
      Just as the mountains surround Jerusalem,
          so the Lord surrounds his people, both now and forever.
      The wicked will not rule the land of the godly,
          for then the godly might be tempted to do wrong.
      O Lord, do good to those who are good,
          whose hearts are in tune with you.
      But banish those who turn to crooked ways, O Lord.
          Take them away with those who do evil.
      May Israel have peace!
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    • Dia 11

      Pools of Bethesda

      16 de dezembro de 2018, Palestina ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      We visited the church of St Anne which was dedicated to Mary’s mother. Next to this church are the pools of Bethesda where Jesus healed The paralysed man. The church was beautiful and had great acoustics.Leia mais

    • Dia 8

      Western Wall Plaza

      14 de maio de 2019, Palestina ⋅ ☀️ 70 °F

      The Western Wall Plaza is a large public square situated adjacent to the Western Wall in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem. Before the 1967 Six-Day War, there was a fifth quarter called the Moroccan or Mughrabi Quarter in the Old City that dated back to the 7th century AD. After the Israelis took back Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War, they told the residents of the Moroccan Quarter to leave and they leveled it. The area was annexed into the Jewish Quarter and transformed into the plaza that it is today. Israel later offered compensation to the former homeowners of the quarter.Leia mais

    • Dia 10

      The Temple Institute - Third Temple prep

      16 de maio de 2019, Palestina ⋅ ☀️ 90 °F

      The Temple Institute is in the Jewish Quarter. The institute's ultimate goal is to see Israel rebuild the Holy Temple on Mount Moriah in Jerusalem. They are still waiting for their Old Testament Messiah to come to earth and they reject that Jesus was the Messiah. No pictures were allowed to be taken inside the institute. As part of its ongoing effort to prepare for the future Temple, they have been preparing ritual objects suitable for Temple use. They say each object has been made as written in the Law of the Old Testament. Priests and the High Priest garments are made. Altar clay bricks have been made and built to the minimum size requirements. The altar can be dismantled and quickly moved to the temple where white plaster will be applied. A copper washbasin, copper utensils for meal and grain offerings and silver trumpets have already been made. They say they know where the ark of the covenant is hidden. They say Solomon created secret chambers to hide the ark from invaders. Fearing its capture by the invading Babylonians, King Josiah had it removed from the Holy of Holies, and hidden in a chamber deep beneath the Temple Mount. They will retrieve it when the third Temple is built. They didn't say anything about the third Temple being the dwelling place of God but called it a gathering place for all peoples.
      The Menorah is completed and displayed in the public square. It is made of real gold over a skeleton that is not gold. It weighs almost a ton and is n a bulletproof clear enclosure. God gave instructions for the first lampstand (or Menorah in Hebrew) in Exodus 25:31-33 “Then you shall make a lampstand of pure gold. The lampstand and its base and its shaft are to be made of hammered work; its cups, its bulbs, and its flowers shall be of one piece with it. Six branches shall go out from its sides; three branches of the lampstand from its one side and three branches of the lampstand from its other side. Three cups shall be shaped like almond blossoms in the one branch, a bulb, and a flower, and three cups shaped like almond blossoms in the other branch, a bulb, and a flower—so for six branches going out from the lampstand.”
      The lampstand provided light for the priests to do their work since there were no windows in the wilderness tabernacle through which natural light could enter. The almond blossom-shaped cups were filled with olive oil, and wicks were inserted into the oil and lit to provide light. All day and all night, whether anyone was present or not, these seven lamps constantly lit up the glory of the Holy Place as a reminder that God's presence is always with His people.
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    Você também pode conhecer este local seguindo os nomes:

    East Jerusalem, Ostjerusalem, القدس الشرقية, Şərqi Qüds, Усходні Іерусалім, Източен Йерусалим, Istočni Jerusalem, Jerusalem Est, Малхбален Къудс-ГӀала, Východní Jeruzalém, Østjerusalem, Urşelimê Rocvetışi, Orienta Jerusalemo, Jerusalén Este, Ida-Jeruusalemm, Ekialdeko Jerusalem, قدس شرقی, Jérusalem-Est, מזרח ירושלים, Istočni Jeruzalem, Yerusalem Timur, Gerusalemme Est, 東エルサレム, Yerusalem Wétan, 동예루살렘, Yerushalayim Oryentala, Источен Ерусалим, കിഴക്കൻ ജറൂസലേം, Baitulmuqaddis Timur, Øst-Jerusalem, Oost-Jeruzalem, Aust-Jerusalem, Jerusalèm Èst, Wschodnia Jerozolima, Jerusalém Oriental, Восточный Иерусалим, Östra Jerusalem, Yerusalemu ya Mashariki, கிழக்கு எருசலேம், เยรูซาเลมตะวันออก, Doğu Kudüs, Східний Єрусалим, مشرقی یروشلم, Đông Jerusalem, 东耶路撒冷

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