Rating: Not rated
Tags: History, Devotion, Lang:en
Summary
Includes pictures
Bethlehem is amongst the oldest cities in the world, one
that has been conquered and ruled by Caananites, Jews, Romans,
Arabs, Crusaders, the Mamluks of Egypt, and the Ottomans. In
the last century alone, it has been controlled by various
different parties. The British took Bethlehem during World War
I and controlled the city from 1920-1948, and in the wake of
the 1948 war between Israel and its neighbors, Jordan annexed
Bethlehem and controlled it until the Six Day War in 1967. It
was during the Six Day War that Israel took control of
Bethlehem, remaining in power over the city until 1995, when,
in compliance with the Oslo Peace Accords, control of the city
and of the surrounding West Bank was handed over to the
Palestinian National Authority. The Palestinians continue to
administer affairs in Bethlehem to the present day. What was it
that caused this one small, unassuming settlement to be the
focus of so much attention and strife? The primary reason that Bethlehem is so famous today is the
Biblical passages that relate the town as the birthplace of
Jesus Christ. Moreover, the oldest continuously used Christian
church in the world is the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem.
Like the town itself, the Church of the Nativity has gone
through numerous cycles of creation and ruin. First built above
the Cave of the Nativity by Emperor Constantine’s mother,
Helena, in May 339, the church existed for almost two centuries
before it was destroyed during the Samarian revolt in 529 CE.
The church was later reconstructed by the Byzantine emperor
Justinian in 565, and it is this structure that has largely
survived to the present day. Today, the Church of the Nativity
is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, alongside the pilgrimage route
that led between Bethlehem and Jerusalem. The town of Nazareth, located in Galilee in northern Israel,
is a bustling settlement of over 60,000 people today. But more
than 2,000 years ago it was an insignificant village of only a
few hundred people-mostly farmers and some laborers who would
travel to the nearby Roman settlements for employment. Yet it
was in this unlikely location that the Holy Family lived. Even
more important is that this was where the Annunciation took
place, the moment when the angel Gabriel revealed to Mary that
she would be the virgin mother of Jesus. Many also maintain
that Nazareth was where Jesus spent many of his childhood years
learning the trade of his father, growing up attending services
at the local synagogue, and developing the foundations of his
faith. Joseph, Mary and Jesus would have had a traditionally Jewish
lifestyle at that time, but after the life of Christ, Nazareth
increasingly became a center of pilgrimage in the Holy Land.
Over the years it has been the location of some of the most
impressive displays of faith against oppression and danger,
representing the turbulence of the early years of Christianity
in the region, and of the military campaigns in the Holy Land
during the Crusades and the Ottoman period. Through it all,
Nazareth has continued to be an extremely important site for
the Christian faith, as there are five sites in present-day
Nazareth that relate to the life and times of Jesus Christ: the
Church of Saint Gabriel, the Basilica of the Annunciation, the
Church of Saint Joseph, the ancient synagogue, and a precipice
on the edge of the town where Jesus was taken to be executed
for blasphemy. Bethlehem & Nazareth: The History and Legacy of Jesus
Christ’s Birthplace and Hometown looks at the history of
both sites and their importance. Along with pictures depicting
important people, places, and events, you will learn about
Bethlehem and Nazareth like never before. **
Includes accounts about the two sites
Includes a bibliography for further reading
Includes a table of contents