Category - Israel

ISRAEL PILGRIMAGE – NOV 18 TO 29, 2011

NOV 18- FR- depart USA on Delta

NOV 19- SA-arrive Ben Gurion Airport, Tel Aviv and transfer to Kfar Maccabiah Hotel & Suites, 7 Perets Bernstein, Tel Aviv 52109, Israel

NOV 20- SU- early departure, devotional on the bus, travel south near where Samson and Delilah lived, by Bet Shemesh and finally into the Elah Valley where we will visit the site of the historic battle between David and Goliath. Tel Lachish about 40 kilometers from Jerusalem guarded the southern ascent to Jerusalem will be our next stop. We will then travel further south to Beersheva where we will have lunch then we will visit Tel Beersheva. It was the southernmost border of the Israelite kingdom. It is identified in the Biblical phrase “From Dan to Beersheva.” We will see Abraham’s well, the horned altar and the ancient tel. We will continue our drive south deep into the Negev region down route 40 for about 80 km to the little town of Mitzpe Ramon where we will visit the overlook above the huge Ramon Crater and then to Isrotel Ramon Inn Hotel where we will overnight. Our Bible study today will be before our evening meal.

NOV 21- MO- early breakfast, load our bus and depart our hotel in Mitzpe Ramon early and begin our journey north through the Negev Desert. Our daily devotional and then the first stop of the day at Avdat the greatest Nabatean city in the Negev. Avdat peaked as a city on the Spice Route from 37BC until 70AD. It is on a limestone hill overlooking the desert and is on the edge of the Wilderness of Zin that is one of the 7 wildernesses the Bible says Moses and the Israelites crossed in the Exodus from Egypt. Wilderness in Biblical and Middle Eastern terms generally means a desert (unlike what we think of wilderness as a heavily forested area.) At Avdat we will be especially interested in seeing the two churches on the site and the northern churches baptismal fonts. Avdat was destroyed by an earthquake in the 7th century AD and was never reoccupied. Our journey will continue north to Tel Arad an ancient Israelite fortress that is about 18 km west of the Dead Sea and then east descending to the Dead Sea where we will have lunch at Ein Bokek a tourist and therapeutic complex on the Dead Sea shores. After lunch we will visit Herod the Greats Masada and then continue north to visit Qumran were the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered. Our touring day will end with a quick dip in the Dead Sea so be sure to have your bathing suits ready. Our journey will continue north along the Jordan River into the Sea of Galilee region, thru Tiberias to our home for the next four nights at Maagan Kibbutz Hotel. Our Bible study will be before our evening meal.

NOV 22-TU- breakfast daily devotional and then we journey south to Beit Shean one of the cities of the Decapolis and one of the most ancient cities of Israel. Our next visit will be to Beit Alpha a Byzantine era synagogue located at the foot of Mount Gilboa. We will visit Megiddo next. It overlooks the Jezreel Valley and is one of the oldest cities in the world. Megiddo is built on a mount that overlooks two key trade roads between Egypt and Assyria and the Phoenician cities and Jerusalem. We will travel from Megiddo to the Nazareth Overlook for a panoramic view of Nazareth and the surrounding area. Our drive back to our hotel will be through the Galilean countryside and down to the Sea of Galilee to Maagan Kibbutz Hotel. Our Bible study will be before our evening meal.

NOV 23- WE-breakfast, daily devotional, Sea of Galilee boat ride and then our journey north thru the Golan where we will first visit Ben Tal, and lunch in the Druze Village of Masade. We will then travel to Caesarea Philippi where we will visit the Gates of Hades and Herod Agrippa’s palace. Our next site will be Tel Dan located at the foot of Mt. Hermon and the Golan Heights. This site will include a visit to the high place of Jeroboam, the Abraham Gate from about 1800 BC, and the Ahab Gate. We will complete our touring day by driving south through the Hula Valley and back to Maagan Kibbutz Hotel on the Sea of Galilee. Our Bible study will be before our evening meal.

NOV 24- TH- breakfast, daily devotional and visits to the Christian sites around the Sea of Galilee. This will include the Mount of Beatitudes, Chorazin, Capernaum, and the Primacy of Peter. Our lunch will be at a falafel stand in Migdal. We will now proceed up from the Sea of Galilee into the Galilee region where we will visit Sepphoris a Roman city that has beautiful mosaics and was the capital of the Galilee region during the Roman occupation. Sepphoris was a prosperous town at the time of Jesus and was only a few miles from Nazareth. We will end our tour day with a drive back across the Galilee down to Maagan Kibbutz Hotel on the Sea of Galilee. Our Bible study will be before our evening meal. This will be our last night in the Galilee.

NOV 25- FR-breakfast, load the bus, set our faces for Jerusalem. The daily devotional is on the bus as we drive across the Galilee. Our first stop is Mt. Carmel where Elijah slew the prophets of Baal. On a clear day the view from here is stunning. Back on the bus and drive south through the Jokneam Pass and down to Caesarea by the Sea. We will see the theater, Herod’s house on the sea, the hippodrome and the Crusader City. We will stop for lunch as we sprint towards Jerusalem. Along the way we will read the Psalms of Ascent and discuss current and historical events related to Jerusalem. We will arrive in Jerusalem and go straight to Bethlehem to Manger Square and visit the Church of the Nativity. Afterward we will have a time for shopping in Bethlehem. We will depart Bethlehem and drive to Ramat Rachel where we will be staying in Jerusalem. Bible study will be after dinner tonight.

NOV 26- SA-breakfast then on the bus and we will have our daily devotional at the Promenade Overlook of Jerusalem. We will visit the Mount of Olives, the Garden of Gethsemane, and the Church of all nations and then up to the Old City of Jerusalem. We will walk into the Old City through what used to be the Sheep Market and enter through the Lion Gate. Our first stop will be the Church of St. Anne and the pool of Bethesda. Continuing up the street we will go to the beginning of the Via Dolorosa at the Ecce Homo Convent where we will visit the Lithostrotos Pavement and then begin our journey on the Via Dolorosa to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. We will identify several of the stations on the Via Dolorosa, including a stop at the Russian Orthodox Church and see the Judgment Gate through which Jesus would have passed on his walk to Calvary. Continuing on the Via Dolorosa we will walk around the corner into the complex of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. We will have some time for shopping in the Christian Quarter of the Old City and return to Ramat Rachel about 5:30pm for our Bible Study and dinner.

NOV 27-SU- breakfast then on the bus and we will have our daily devotional at the Promenade Overlook of Jerusalem. We will visit the Temple Mount, the Kotel Tunnel and the Davidson Museum and Southern Steps of the Temple. We will walk up to Hurva Square in the Jewish Quarter where we will have our lunch and a visit with Moshe Kempenski at Shorashim. We will have some time for shopping in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City and return to Ramat Rachel about 6:00pm for our Bible Study and dinner.

NOV 28-MO- last breakfast in Israel after which we will load the bus and begin our day with our daily devotional at the Promenade Overlook of Jerusalem. We will begin at the Upper Room. Afterward we will walk over to St. Peter in Gallicantu where we will see the location of Peter’s denial of Jesus, a Roman Stepped Way from the time of Jesus, the Assumptionist Church St. Peter in Gallicantu built over a traditional location for the house of Caiaphas and an overlook of the City of David and a Southern view of the Old City of Jerusalem and the Mount of Olives. Yad Vashem’s Holocaust Museum will be our next stop and then the Israel Museum Shrine of the Book. Our visit to Jerusalem will be completed at the Garden Tomb located not many steps from the Damascus Gate. After the Garden Tomb we will begin our trip to Tel Aviv. We will visit several sites along the way to Jaffa where we will have our evening meal. Then on to the airport for our 11:55pm flight home.

NOV 29-TU- arrive home in the US by late morning

NEARING ISRAEL

NEARING ISRAEL

Here we are
Worn and bruised
Flying in planes
Ain’t a cruise

We’ve paid a price
Of worry and some fear
Drained of vigor
Our bodies scream stop!

And yet ahead we see
The Land of the Lord
Beckoning to us
Come, see and explore

See the valleys
Those conquerors settled
Drawing Israel
From God’s hand

See the hills
Where Jesus walked
Bringing peace
To those He sought

Birthing life
For you and me
Giving spiritual eyes
That we might see

Walking roads
Of wisdom’s school
Giving ear
To prophet’s talk

I want to see
I seek to know
Lord help me
To see your home

CC 12/28/03

ISRAEL PILGRIMAGE – JANUARY 11-20 – 2001

Israel Pilgrimage
January 11-20, 2001
How you’ll experience Israel in 10 Days

Day 1(1/11-Thursday)  Depart New Orleans

tombrimmergalilee.jpg (4322 bytes)Day 2 (1/12-Friday)  Depart Zurich at 9:55A and arrive Tel Aviv, Ben Gurion Airport, at 2:40 pm where we will meet Tom Brimmer, and our NET bus.  We will  drive thru the citrus groves of Sharon Plain thru the Wadi Milek, cross the Jezreel Valley and up the Jordan Valley to overnight at Ein Gev on the Eastern Shore of the Sea of Galilee.   We will spend three nights at the Kibbutz Ein Gev.  We encourage everyone to rise early on Saturday morning to greet the dawn on the shores of the Sea of Galilee.  This will be a once in a lifetime experience for most people and we will get to spend three nights on the Sea of Galilee.

mountbeatitudes.jpg (17009 bytes)Day 3(1/13-Saturday) Israeli breakfast each day.  You will find the breakfast meal interesting and delicious.  We will have a devotional on the bus shortly after we depart our hotel at 8:00 a.m.  Tour begins at Kibbutz En Gev.  We will make a quick stop at Kursi where Jesus healed the domoniac.   Then continue our tour with a boat trip across the Galilee to Nof Ginosar.  We will see a fishing boat like Peter would have used from the time of Jesus. We will visit Tabgha, Primacy of Peter, Capernaum, Chorazim and Mount of the Beatitudes.   We will travel north and see ancient Hazor, visit Caesarea Phillippi and weather and time permitting travel up Mount Hermon to visit Nimrod Fortress.  We will complete our day by crossing the Golon and traveling back down to Ein Gev where we will overnight.

 galileeearlyworship3.jpg (16742 bytes)Day 4 (1/14-Sunday) We will depart En Gev at 8:00A and journey across the Galilee visiting Cana of Galilee, Nazareth, and the ancient city of Sepphoris.   Then we will journey to the Mediterranean Coast and visit Rosh HaNikra, the Lebanon border and completing our tour day at the port city of Akko.  We will travel back to En Gev for our evening meal.

korazim.jpg (18551 bytes)Day 5 (1/15-Monday)We will have our bags down for loading on the bus at 7am, breakfast and departure at 7:45am. We will travel to down the Jordan Valley to Bet Shean where we will visit that ancient Roman and Philistine City.  When we depart Bet Shean we will visit Megiddo, and    Mount Carmel where Elijah slew the prophets of Baal.  We will have lunch on Mt. Carmel at a local restaurant.  Caesarea on the coast will be our next stop. Then we will travel down to Jericho and visit where Joshua and the tribe of Israel entered the Promised Land.

Crusader City.jpg (3904 bytes)

betshean.jpg (5000 bytes)  When we depart Jericho we will travel down to Qumran then back to the Old Roman Road to Jerusalem from Jericho and arrive in Jerusalem at 6:30pm.   We will check into the St. George’s Cathedral Guesthouse where we will have our evening meal and spend our evenings for the remainder of the trip.

megiddowatertunnel.jpg (9945 bytes)0209romanroadenroute.jpg (6969 bytes)

Day 6 (1/16-Tuesday) After an 8 AM visit to the Garden tomb, we will spend all day in Jerusalem.  Some of the things we will visit will be the Arab Market, Damascus Gate,  Kidron Valley, Western Wall, Moslem Quarter, Christian Quarter, Russia Church and the Temple Mount.  This will be an extremely interesting day.

jerusalemviadolorosa.jpg (17143 bytes)Day 7 (1/17)-Wednesday) Today we will visit Masada, Tel Arad, and Beer Sheva.   We will journey back to Jerusalem on the Kiryat-Gat to Jerusalem highway.  We will turn right at Kiryat-Gat and travel up the ancient road past Lachish, see where David slew Goliath and Samson wooed Delilah.

Day 8 (1/18-Thursday) Today we will visit Bethlehem in the morning and travel around the area visiting some of the significant sites including the Mount of Olives, the Jerusalem overlook, St. Peter in Gallicantu, Mt. Zion and other locations as time permits.   One of the important activities today will be to discuss the city of Jerusalem and get a good sense of where things happened during the Davidic kingdom.

domeodrock.jpg (7597 bytes)Day 9 (1/19-Friday) We will be visiting the Jewish Quarter, several archaeological digs and the Burnt House.  The afternoon will be free for revisiting a place that we hurried past or for shopping and collecting the few things that you would like to bring back home.

Day 10 (1/20-Saturday) We will depart Tel Aviv in the early a.m. and arrive at home in the early evening.

Hotels:
*Ein Gev Resort Village, Galilee.  011-972-6-675-8027 (fax 675-1590)
*St. Georges Cathedral Guesthouse, 20 Nablus Road,  Jerusalem 91190Tel 011-972-2-6283302,
                         *Fax-2-6282253

Contact in Israel will be Tom Brimmer.  (H) 011-972-2-676-0862; cell phone 011-972-052-874-285;  011-972-053-464-718

CAESAREA- Theater

ISRAEL PILGRIMAGE – NOVEMBER 15-24 – 2000

Israel Pilgrimage
November 15-24, 2000
How you’ll experience Israel in 10 Days
Prayer Guide for the Trip

Day 1(11/15-Wednesday)  Depart New Orleans at 7:30A enroute to the airport.  Leave New Orleans on American flight 1929 departing New Orleans at 9:55A arriving Chicago-Ohare at 12:10P.  Depart Chicago-Ohare at 4:20P arriving Zurich next day at 7:45A.

tombrimmergalilee.jpg (4322 bytes)Day 2 (11/16-Thursday) Depart Zurich at 9:55A and arrive Tel Aviv, Ben Gurion Airport, at 2:40 pm where we will meet Tom Brimmer, and our NET bus.  We will  travel across the Sharon Plain thru the Wadi Milek, across the Jezreel Valley and up the Jordan Valley to overnight at Ein Gev on the Eastern Shore of the Sea of Galilee.   We will spend three nights at the Kibbutz Ein Gev. Crusader City.jpg (3904 bytes)

accoendel.jpg (11398 bytes)Day 3 (11/17-Friday) Early Israeli breakfast each day.  We will have a devotional on the bus shortly after we depart our hotel at 8:00 a.m.  Tour begins at Kibbutz En Gev.  We will make a quick stop at Kursi.   Then continue our tour with a boat trip across the Galilee.  The boat will dock at Nof Ginosar.  We will visit Tabgha, Primacy of Peter, Capernaum, Chorazim and Mount of the Beatitudes.   We will travel north and see ancient Hazor, visit Caesarea Phillippi and weather and time permitting travel up Mount Hermon to visit Nimrod Fortress.  We will complete our day by crossing the Golon and traveling back down to Ein Gev where we will overnight.

accosuk.jpg (4751 bytes)accoharbor.jpg (3943 bytes)

Day 4 (11/18-Saturday) We will depart En Gev at 8:00A and journey across the Galilee visiting Cana of Galilee, Nazareth, and the ancient city of Sepphoris.   Then we will journey to the Mediterranean Coast and visit Rosh HaNikra, the Lebanon border and completing our tour day at the port city of Akko.  We will travel back to En Gev for our evening meal.

galileeboats.jpg (17265 bytes)

megiddojezreel.jpg (10653 bytes)

Day 5 (11/19-Sunday) We will have our bags down for loading on the bus at 7am, breakfast and departure at 7:45am. We will travel to down the Jordan Valley to Bet Shean where we will visit that ancient Roman and Philistine City.

betshean.jpg (5000 bytes)When we depart Bet Shean we will visit Megiddo, and    Mount Carmel where Elijah slew the prophets of Baal.  We will have lunch on Mt. Carmel at a local restaurant.  Caesarea on the coast will be our next stop.  Then we will travel down to Jericho and visit where Joshua and the tribe of Israel entered the Promised Land.  When we depart Jericho we will travel down to Qumran then back to the Old Roman Road to Jerusalem from Jericho and arrive in Jerusalem at 6:30pm.   We will check into the St. George’s Cathedral Guesthouse where we will have our evening meal and spend our evenings for the remainder of the trip.

megiddosolomonsteps.jpg (16106 bytes)

0209romanroadenroute.jpg (6969 bytes)

stgeorgestomrickrobtclay.jpg (11894 bytes)

Day 6 (11/20-Monday) After an 8 AM visit to the Garden tomb, we will spend all day in Jerusalem.  Some of the things we will visit will be the Arab Market, Damascus Gate,  Kidron Valley, Western Wall, Moslem Quarter, Christian Quarter, Russia Church and the Temple Mount.  This will be an extremely interesting day.

jerusalemviadolorosa.jpg (17143 bytes)Day 7 (11/21)-Tuesday) Today we will visit Masada, Tel Arad, and Beer Sheva.   We will journey back to Jerusalem on the Kiryat-Gat to Jerusalem highway.  We will turn right at Kiryat-Gat and travel up the ancient road past Lachish, see where David slew Goliath and Samson wooed Delilah.

domeodrock.jpg (7597 bytes)Day 8 (11/22-Wednesday) Today we will visit Bethlehem in the morning and travel around the area visiting some of the significant sites including the Mount of Olives, the Jerusalem overlook, St. Peter in Gallicantu, Mt. Zion and other locations as time permits.   One of the important activities today will be to discuss the city of Jerusalem and get a good sense of where things happened during the Davidic kingdom.

Day 9 (11/23-Thursday) We will be visiting the Jewish Quarter, several archaeological digs and the Burnt House.  The afternoon will be free for revisiting a place that we hurried past or for shopping and collecting the few things that you would like to bring back home.

The evening meal will at St. George’s will be a time a fellowship and goodbye to Israel.

Day 10 (11/24-Friday) We will depart Tel Aviv in the early a.m. and arrive at home in the early evening.

Hotels:
*Ein Gev Resort Village, Galilee.  011-972-6-675-8027 (fax 675-1590)
*St. George’s Cathedral Guesthouse, 20 Nablus Road-P.O. Box 1901, Jerusalem 91190
Tel 011-972-2-6283302, Fax 011-972-2-6282253

Contact in Israel will be Tom Brimmer.  (H) 011-972-2-676-0862; cell phone 011-972-052-874-285;  011-972-053-464-718

groupatcapernaum1.jpg (17387 bytes) 

olivepress.jpg (8476 bytes)

olive press

CHURCH OF ST. ANNE on the VIA DOLOROSA

TEL BEER SHEVA

Mike Moskau at Beersheva-Abraham's Well

Tel Beer Sheva
In Judges (20:1) and First Samuel (3:10; 11:17; 24:2) Dan to Beer Sheva’ is a stereotyped expression for the limits of the land of Israel. Beer Sheva’ was important for its association with the Patriarchs. The name is explained as the “Well of the Seven” or the “Well of Oath.” It is a rugged location perched in the Negev Desert just beyond the view of the southern edge of the Judean Mountains.

Tel Beer Sheva is located only a few miles from the modern town of Beer Sheva. It was a place of oath and promise. Abraham found security for his people at the well he dug. Isaac built an altar to the Lord. Jacob received a vision to take his family to Egypt. This was a real frontier settlement where a lot of activity between the Patriarchs and the surrounding nations of the Philistines and Amalekites took place.

King David built up Beer Sheva’s fortifications in the early part of his reign. After the fortifications the city was a lot more tranquil than at any time in its history. Then, it was destroyed by King Shishak and later rebuilt. The next mention of Beer Sheva’ is Amos’ condemnation of the pagan worship. Hezekiah destroyed the altar used at Beer Sheva’s worship center. It did not conform to Biblical directions.

People like religion. The pomp and feel good experience of doing things in a way that doesn’t conflict with their private life. That’s what religion is, rote practice that doesn’t interfere with one’s heart. On the other hand, following Christ is an inner change. Jesus gives us a new heart and makes us new creations.

Abraham worshipped the Lord God. The people of Tel Beer Sheva created a cultic practice of religion that worshipped the creation and not the creator. They liked to do what they wanted to do. They refused to obey the Lord. Cut stones and an altar with horns separated the people of Beer Sheva from a Holy God. Look to your life. Is there some created thing that is separating you from the Lord Jesus?

A walk along the walls offers a spectacular view of Mount Carmel and Haifa, Galilee and the old city. The citadel museum of heroism, built on top of the crusader foundations, commemorates the Jewish freedom fighters imprisoned by the British. Layers of diverse cultures peer through the ancient walls of a subterranean complex, which was excavated in the 1950’S.

The city is more than 4,000 years old. During biblical times the city was under Canaanite control. It is mentioned in ancient Egyptian scrolls from around 1800 BC. The city assumed great importance on the trade route between Egypt and Syria.

 

ACRE (or AKKO)

Entering the Old City of Akko

Acre (or Akko), Israel, port 10 mi (16 km) from Haifa across the Bay of Acre.

Greek legend says that Hercules was once seriously wounded here.  He found the herbs to cure his wounds, in this port city and named it Aka for cure.  Greeks settled here in the third century BC.  The name of this 4,000-year-old city appears is spelled many different ways. Officially, it is usually spelled as Acre (in English). However, in Hebrew, the city’s name is pronounced Akko.
Acre was incorporated into the empire of Alexander the Great after his conquest in 332 B.C.  The Egyptian king Ptolemy II subsequently seized the city.   He renamed the city Ptolemais in the 2nd century B.C.  This name stuck until the Muslim conquest in the 7th century A.D.

The Arabs conquered the city in 638 A.D. and developed its natural harbor. In 1104 it was captured in the First Crusade and was held by Christians until 1187 when Saladin took it. It was retaken in the Third Crusade in 1191 and was the center of Christianity in the Holy Land for the next century.

The Ottoman Turks took Akko in 1517 and with the help of the British withstood a 61-day siege by Napoleon in 1799.  British troops captured the city in 1918 and assigned it to the Arabs in the 1948 partition of Palestine.

Israeli forces in the Arab-Israeli war of 1948 captured Acre. By the 1990s its population was about three fourths Jewish and one fourth Arab. The city is a popular tourist site. Landmarks include an ancient citadel, walled fortifications, the al-Jazzar mosque, and several churches dating from the Crusades.
Akko is one of the most dramatic and captivating of Israel’s cities. Within its walls are labyrinthine networks of alleys and streets filled with life.