Sunday, March 18, 2012

JERUSALEM JOURNAL: DAY 15

SUNRDAY, JANUARY 10, 2010

i. Group Itinerary

Day 15: Sunday, January 10, 2010
1. View of Aijalon Valley from the Kiriath Jearim Ridge route
2. View of Beth Horon Ridge route
3. Modiʼin was discussed as we passed through (Home of the Macabees)
4. Neot Kedumim (Biblical Nature Reserve)
5. Stephen Wu goes to Urgent Care (Jenn Gold assists)--taxi from Neot Kedumim
6. Tel El Tzafit (Gath of the Philistines) --A Talbot first
7. Beit Guvrin (Tel Maresha) Excavation and Cave Spelunking
8. Dinner at Yad HaShmonah
9. Northern Preview Lecture

II.    Commentary: My best day on the trip, so far.  My back seemed to be less sore than usual, and I actually had feeling in the top of my right foot, for once.  This was a “free day” with respect to the fact that we will not be tested on the activities or sites that we visited.  Even Todd seemed more relaxed.


III.    Sites Visited

Aijilon Valley Overlook

The two routes up from the Shelphelah to the Judean Hill Country are the Kireat Jarim  and the Beth Horon Ridge Routes.  We first stopped in the Aijalon Valley to look at the valley, itself, and then drove up to the City of Modíin from which the Maccabees originated.  From there we went down the Beth Horon Ridge Route in hopes that we might find an overlook from which to view the ascent.  This route is a nice, gradual, ascent and does not cross wadis.  The modern highway is next to the ancient route.  However, we were unable to transfer onto the old road, because it was blocked off, due to the Arab/Israeli conflict in that area.  Instead, we had to take pictures of the route from the highway.  It was easy to see the Israeli watchtower which provided control of the area.

In Joshua 10, the Israelites chased the Amorites down the ascent, after the Gibeonites, who had tricked Israel into signing a treaty, appealed to the Israelites after being attacked by coalition of Amorite kings.  The Lord cause the defeat of the aggressors, causing the sun to stand still over Gibeon and the moon to stand still over Aijalon, and chasing them down to Azekah and Makkedah with large hailstones.  Also, when Jonathon surprised the Philistines at Mitzpah (see 1 Samuel 14:31), they were struck down from Michmash to Aijulon, again along the Beth Horon Ridge Route.  Finally, in 2 Samuel 5, David defeated the Philistines all the way from Gibeon to Gezer, and the enemy would have retreated down either the Beth Horon or the Kireat Jearim  Ridge Route--- probably Beth Horon.

Neót Qedumim  

Our next stop was Neót Qedumim, a 600 acre biblical landscape garden.  Neót means “beautiful,” and Qedumim means either “return to the past”, “East”, or “to go forward.”  It was founded in 1964 before the Six Day War and sat on the border between Israel and Jordan.  Its purpose is to help people understand the context of the Bible from the aspect of the land so that things like shepherds, farmers, and parables make more sense.

One must realize that Israel is no longer the land that it once was in biblical times.  Overgrazing and neglect has ruined the landscape, and although the Government has engaged in a massive reforestation project, often non-native plants, like pine trees, are being used and push out the native vegetation.  Therefore, Neót Qedumim has attempted to recreate the forests of milk and honey that were promised in God’s covenant with Abraham.

There are seven species of primary food that is grown in Israel (See Deuteronomy 8:7).  They are

a.    Wheat
b.    Barley
c.    Grapes
d.    Figs
e.    Pomegranates
f.    Olives
g.    Dates (the “honey” as in the phrase “milk and honey” does not refer to bees; it refers to the honey from the fruit of the date palm)

The major agricultural products of Israel are as follows and were represented in the Temple:

a.    Cereal – the Temple bread.
b.    Wine – the libation offering, which is poured.
c.    Olive oil– the menorah, which is fueled by olive oil.

There is a separate word and time which describes each harvest.  And it normally only rains from December through February, usually a total of thirty days maximum.

House of the Guard

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Our first stop was the House of the Guard, which is the place from which the vineyards are guarded and where one would bring the grapes for crushing.  Vineyards were actually found there from the Byzantine period, and the wine was pressed with bare feet, to prevent crushing of the seeds, which are bitter.  Once the juice is extracted, it flows into a separate basin.  The Hebrew word “gat” means “press.”  Wine was used not only as a beverage, but also as a disinfectant.  It was added to water in cisterns as a sterilizing agent.  Timothy is told to drink wine for stomach pain.  Wine was also used to disinfect the blood and body parts of the sacrifices on the altar.  Noah was the first person said to have planted a vine in the Holy Land.

 

Oil Press:

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Olives are harvested in December.  Green and black olives come from the same species.  Green olives are picked early, and olives for oil are picked when the olives turn completely black.  A cloth is placed beneath each tree, and the tree is shaken.  Both the olive and the seed are pressed, and the first pressing yields what is called “extra virgin” olive oil.  Subsequent pressings yield a less desirable product.  After the olive and seeds are crushed, the resulting material is put through a press, and the olive oil is extracted.  The major use for olive oil was to provide light.  A wick is lighted and will burn more steadily and with a more pleasant smell that other oils.  Olive oil was used for light five thousand years ago.  Another use for olive oil is for anointing.  The Messiah, from the Hebrew word meaning “anointed one” corresponds with the Greek word with the same meaning, “Cristo.”

The olive tree never dies.  Its trunk may look withered and old, but you will often find new shoots that come out.  The Bible talks about the new shoot that will come out of the house of Jesse.  The olive tree is the symbol of new life, and the emblem of Israel is a menorah with an olive branch on each side. 

Zechariah 4 talks about his vision of the Golden Lampstand and the rebuilding of the Temple, the word of the Lord: “not by mind, not by force, but by spirit.” 

Israel recently minted a coin which shows a woman holding a baby in her arms and a man kneeling down on the ground planting.  This picture signifies new hope.

The Threshing Floor:

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The God of Israel provided His people with water from heaven, or rain.  Israel prays that rain will come in time for each crop, and the rain is supplied by God’s providence.  The Bible tells us that by the sweat of our brow we shall eat bread.  This is demonstrated on the threshing floor, in which the women ground their daily bread, taking one hour of labor.  The portrait of the virtuous woman is somebody with strong arms. 

Terracing is a necessity, and the stones which hold up the terraces must be held in tact.  The parable of the sower refers to the seed that land on the rocks.  This is actually seed that falls around the stones which hold the terraces.  And, there is no adhesive binding the stones together.  If one stone fails, the others follow: no terrace, no food.  Interesting enough, the word “garden” contains a compound word meaning: “gar” and “eden.”

Torah Scribe Demonstration:

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Torah scribes only use kosher animal skins: cows, gazelles, sheep, or goats.  Scribes do scrolls for mezuzahs, phylacteries, as well. 

The mezuzah scroll contains two verses: “Here oh Israel, the Lord is one (Deuteronomy 6:4)…………….you will drink rain from heaven” (Deuteronomy 11).  They go on the lintel or doorpost of each house. 

The word “fila” refers to prayers.  Thus phylacteries contain prayers, and the one worn on the head has four compartments, one for each sense, while the one worn on the arms has only one compartment for the sense of feeling. 

Torah scrolls are written with a reed.  For ink, the scribe uses a mixture of pomegranate skins, the gall (or cancerous growths) on the oak tree, and sap from the almond tree (to give the ink shine).  All materials are natural, including the dies.  Various color pigments are added and the mixture is boiled.  Finally, honey is also added.

Before writing text, the scribe will always take a ritual bath.  For mezuzahs or phylacteries, if a mistake is made, the whole scroll has to be disposed of in a ganizah, and the text is eventually buried.  A Torah scroll must have at least forty-two lines.  The first five books of the Bible have 600,000 letters, the number of Israelites who came out of Egypt.  The Torah is always decorated.   If a mistake in the scroll is made, it can be scraped off, but if God’s name has been written as part of the mistake, it must be cut out and put in the ganizah and the cut piece is then replaced. 

Tel Tsafit

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We briefly visited Tel Tsafit (Light) which may have been the Gath of the Philistines.  There may have been a Philistine temple here, and they also found an inscription which may have been a reference to “Goliath.”  David spent time here during his flight from Saul.  To avoid possible retribution, he acted crazy, pretending to be insane.   In 2 Samuel, Chapter 1, David laments Saul’s death and urges the Israelites to tell it not in Gath where Saul died, since the Philistines would be encouraged by that news.  The Ark of the Covenant was also brought down to Gath from Ashkelon and then sent to Ekron.  On a second trip to Gath, King Achish gave David the city of Ziglag as his own, where he lived for a year and four months.

Gath was a great place for asylum:  in 1 Kings 2, Shimei had given David problems and was told that as soon as he crossed the Kidron, Solomon would kill him.  Verse 39 relates the fact that two of his slaves ran off to seek asylum in Gath.  Shimei left the Kidron Valley to bring the slaves back, and Solomon found out about it and had his general, Benaiah, strike him down.  After that act, the kingdom was solidly in Solomon’s hands, at least for the rest of his lifetime.

Tel Maresha

Our last visit gave us the chance to become amateur archeologists.  The Maresha site is a bit different from the other sites, because, instead of being a mound of layers of human occupation or strata, it was a series of caves which were used for storage and eventually used for dumping.  Therefore, there is no strata, and the archeologists don’t need to worry about the usual precautions that must be observed when digging in strata segmented sites.  At this site, the largest Heliodorus inscription  in Israel’s archeological history was found.  Of course, in our diggings, all that we found were bones and pottery (I dug up two pieces).  However, one of our group actually found a ring and, another, a decorated bead.  We quickly found out that Indiana Jones had it all wrong.

Friday, November 4, 2011

JERUSALEM JOURNAL: DAY 14

JERUSALEM JOURNAL: DAY 14– SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 2010

I. Group Itinerary

Day 14: Saturday, January 9, 2010
1. Quiz on Southern study (score: 100 NIS)
2. Church service at Jerusalem Assembly (in their new [being remodeled] building)
3. Bus transfer to Jaffa Gate
4. Lunch at Jacobʼs Pizza (across from the Gloria Hotel)
5. Shaabanʼs (Ali Baba Souvenir Shop)
6. Walk to Damascus Gate
7. Garden Tomb (and more shopping)
8. Walk around wall past New Gate
9. Bus transfer from Jaffa Gate to Yad HaShmonah
10. Dinner at Yad HaShmonah

II. Commentary: Today is a free day. Except for the test this morning, we were free to do anything that we want.

III. Places Visited

Jerusalem Assembly of God

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Service at the Jerusalem Assembly of God, January 9, 2010
Service at the Jerusalem Assembly of God, January 9, 2010
We were invited to attend a service at the Jerusalem Assembly of God. Most of the people wanted to go, and so we did. The service was held in a building which is being renovated. Because they have both Messianic Jews and Christians attending, the service was in both Hebrew and English. That made it somewhat long. However, it was like most of the reformed church services that I have previously attended. So, there was nothing special there. I personally would have preferred the Anglican setting in which I worshiped last Sunday, but I am also glad that our group was able to worship together.

 

Elvis Inn

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Several of us chose to return to Yad Hashmona after the service, where I planned to spend time studying for our Galilee trip. But, before we got back, Joel, our bus driver had to fill up at the corner gas station, which just happens to be the home of the Elvis Inn, where there is a gold statue of the King and Elvis imitators who pantomime to the recordings of Elvis during the time that the Elvis Inn is open. Some of our group bought hamburgers, which cost $13.50 each. I settled for a $2.50 ice cream bar. As soon as our tank was filled, we returned to Yad Hashmona, and I was able to be first in line at the washing machine and dryer that was available for our use and studied all day. Tomorrow we have a regular day.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

JERUSALEM JOURNAL: DAY 13

JERUSALEM JOURNAL: DAY 13– FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 2010

We are now at Yad Hashmona and will be here for the next three days. We completed our tour of the the Shephelah, Negev, the Wilderness, and the South Arava, or Jordan Rift Valley. Tomorrow we have another silly test.

Todd still doesn’t have a clue as to how to deal with people with disabilities. This afternoon, we made a stop, to hike up the canyon of the Nature preserve at En Gedi. He suggested that I and others who might have difficulty doing steep climbing would be better to stay with the bus. However, when people got back, they told me that the hike was easy, because Todd was forced to hike behind a slower group. So, Todd’s concerns weren’t about me or others. It was the fact that they might slow him down. I have lost a lot of respect for him and for the Bible Lands tour. Yet, we are still seeing some wonderful places, so I can’t complain too much.

My cold has not become worse, thank God. Tomorrow is a free afternoon. However, Todd wants us to go to his Assembly of God Church and then drop us in Old Jerusalem for shopping. I really don’t feel up to that. Instead, I would rather come back. I may ask him in the morning to stay here instead of go to church.

MASADA

Our first site was Masada. We stayed at the guest house last night, and then this morning we were given the choice of walking up for the sunrise, walking up later, or taking the tram. Of course, I chose the latter. The ride up was spectacular, and the top was awesome. Masada is the second most visited site in Israel. It is the drama of the place that draws people to it.

There are two important periods of time that concern Masada. The first was during the reign of King Herod, around 28 BC. Masada may have been first built by the Hasmonaeans, but Herod the Great made many improvements and refurbishments. The site is surrounded by casement walls and includes numerous cisterns and a water system which channels water from the surrounding wadis which fill up from flash floods. Herod probably strengthened the site for one or more of the following reasons:

  1. He was afraid of a Jewish uprising, especially because of his known cooperation with the Romans, as well as his building of pagan temples throughout the land.
  2. He was afraid of outside threats by those close to him. For example, he supported Mark Anthony and probably feared loosing favor with the Romans when Anthony lost favor with the emperor. Also, he feared that Cleopatra might be coveting the territory given to him by the Romans.
  3. Masada guarded the trade routes in the desert and was the highest point around.

The second period that concerns Masada was the Jewish Revolt in 66, which ended with the destruction of the Temple in AD 70. All of the information available about this period in Masada’s history was provided by the historian Josephus Flavius, who was a priest, but found enough favor with the Romans to end up commanding the Roman Army in Galilee. Although not an eye witness, he would have been privy to the account of battle by General Silva, who fought the last holdouts at Masada, before 967 of them, by his account, committed suicide in AD 73 or 74, when they could no longer hold out against Roman siege.

There was plenty and food and water for the holdouts to survive at Masada; Herod had seen to that, building storehouses to insure adequate provisioning. Because of the dry weather, food was easily preserved for long periods. Evidence, for example, was found of imported wine from Italy, the inscriptions showing that the wine belonged to Herod. It was the siege ramp and siege engine that the Romans built that did the Jews in. A siege engine is a big tower on wheels with battering rams. The Romans built an incline up the walls of the fortress and then rolled the tower into place, using the battering rams to break through the casement walls. The Jews countered by filling up the spaces in the casement with wood, but the Romans were able to set fire to the wood and breach the walls, anyway.  Evidence of the siege can be seen by the siege camps that were set up around the mountain by the Romans. The fact that all but six committed suicide, if Josephus is to be believed, surely must have disheartened the 10th Roman Legion of 15,000 men who had been waiting as many as five years to finally defeat the rebels. It also raises the rallying cry of today that says, “Masada, never again.”

We know from 1 Samuel that David was in the area, running away from Saul. The Bible says that he spent time in the “stronghold” of En Gedi. This may be a reference to Masada, because the word metzuda is used. It is also probable that the Romans used Masada as a place from where they could observe and control the trade routes.

On the site, there is a synagogue which the rebels built from the stables. There they found scripture buried in one of the back rooms and also found scrolls in other places. Some of these places may have been genizahs, or places for worn out scrolls. There was also a bathhouse and a Mikvah, or ritual bathing place. Bathhouses were places where people socialized. Ritual bathing places where people cleansed themselves. The bathhouses were heated by burning wood under floors which were held up by pillars. There were pipes which went up the walls. The ceilings were curved to prevent water dripping down from above.

Herod’s Palace, on the Northern side was terraced in three levels, with a clear view of En Gedi and the mountains of Moab. There was a circular terrace which was a meeting area. Below that, there was a private residence for VIPs. They also found a small bathroom. Steel staircases allowed people access to the different levels along the side of the cliffs. While there is no proof yet found that all 967 of Masada’s residences committed suicide, the bodies of three people were found on the lower terrace.

Another site, Machaerous, across the Dead Sea in Jordan, was also a hold-out, but there, the Jews surrendered, after their leader was captured. Herodion was also a hold-out during the revolt.

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DEAD SEA

We stopped at a public beach in En Gedi to take a swim at the Dead Sea. The salt and mineral content of the water is 30 to 35%, almost double that of the Pacific Ocean. The reason is that the Dead Sea is the lowest point on earth, 1330’ below sea level, at the shoreline. Because of that, there is no place for the water to flow out. It is impossible to sink in the Dead Sea, because the mineral content of the water is denser than it is in your body. When you swim in the Dead Sea, you bob up and down like a cork. The salt will sting your lips, eyes, and any open sores which you might have. However, the mineral content also has a healing affect, and there are many creams and ointments that are manufactured from the Dead Sea minerals. In biblical times, the Dead Sea was known as the Salt Sea, the Sea of the Aravah, or the Eastern Sea. The word En Gedi means “Young Goat.” After the Bar Kova, or second revolt, virtually all Jews moved to Capernaum.

QUMRAN

The current theory is that Qumran was a community of Essene Jews who rejected the temple establishment. Some of the evidence pointing to that includes:

  1. Pottery which was fashioned for poor people.
  2. The writings of Pliny, who reference the Essenes as a group living above En Gedi.
  3. The caves are located within a mile and a half of their community.
  4. Predominantly men are found in the cemetery below.
  5. Inkwells and writing implements were found on the site.
  6. Ritual baths were found on the site.

They called themselves the “Yaha.” They claim to have connections with John the Baptist:

  1. They both lived in the wilderness.
  2. They both were ascetics.
  3. They both considered ritual baths (baptism) important.
  4. They were both against the leadership of Jerusalem.

Yet, John’s baptism is different; it is one time. Therefore, it may be doubtful that John the Baptist lived with them, as they claim.

The site was originally discovered by Bedouins. Many of those Bedouins who worked for the archeologists sold discovered scrolls on the black market rather than turn them over to their employers. The scrolls were written-on animal skins, and they were dated according to their paleography, or their writing style. Most of the scrolls were written elsewhere and brought to Qumran. About 400 of the scrolls found were in Cave #4 (there were eleven caves), and many of the scrolls were non-biblical, giving us a glance into the lives of the Essenes. They use similar metaphors to the Apostle John (lightness, as compared with darkness, for example) and preserve Old Testament Text and a window into the New Testament.

Therefore, the caves could be genizahs, where damaged or worn-out scriptures or other documents (including heretical writings with God’s name) are stored, or a place to hide the scrolls, because the Romans were coming. It could have also been a plain old storage space, although it could not be considered a library in the traditional sense. The probability is that there are additional scrolls and, perhaps caves, to be found.

The people living here dammed the Wadi Kidron and built an aqueduct to transfer water to the ritual pools. In 31 AD, the site was destroyed by an earthquake. After AD 70, this site may be become a Roman fort to guard the routes along the Dead Sea.