Showing posts with label Judean Desert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judean Desert. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2015

Masada Like You've Never Seen ✡ "My Kindness and My Fortress"

My kindness and my fortress, my high tower and my deliverer, my shield in Whom I take refuge

PSALMS (144:2)
 

חַסְדִּי וּמְצוּדָתִי מִשְׂגַּבִּי וּמְפַלְטִי לִי מָגִנִּי וּבוֹ חָסִיתִי

תהילים קמד:ב

khas-dee u-m'-tzu-da-tee mis-ga-bee u-m'-fal-tee lee ma-gi-nee u-vo kha-see-tee

Today's Israel Inspiration

Here's why Masada is Israel's #1 tourist destination after Jerusalem. Along with its sheer height and incredible ancient ruins, the story of the Jewish zealots who withstood a three-year siege by the Romans has become a symbol of heroic resistance. In their last days, a man named Eleazar Ben Yair made this final speech: "My loyal followers, long ago we resolved to serve neither the Romans nor anyone else but only God, who alone is the true and righteous Lord of men." Thereafter, the zealots took their own lives to avoid capture, save for two women and their few children in hiding. Masada stands symbolically for 'never again shall we fall,' and in Hebrew, "Masada" מצדה comes from the word in our verse meaning "fortress."
 

Hebrew Music Monday

In honor of recent Jerusalem Day, we bring you Dudu Fisher's beautiful rendition of "If I Forget You Jerusalem" based on Psalm 137. Learn the words in Hebrew with our helpful transliteration.

Stunning Aerial Video of Masada

You'll have to excuse our excitement at including a second video today, but this stunning footage of Masada is too good to miss!

Jerusalem Dove

The dove is a symbol of our true desire for peace in the Holy Land. Get this beautiful figurine of a dove atop beautiful Jerusalem buildings and skyline.

Today's Israel Photo

Ancient ruins on Masada by Noam Chen. Located in the Judean Desert, Masada's fortress included storehouses, living quarters, an armory, two large palaces originally built by Herod, as well as ritual baths, a synagogue and cisterns that were refilled by rainwater.
 

Thank You

Please help us continue to spread the beauty and significance of the Land of Israel!
 

“Only Wish I Had Done it Earlier”

It’s great to hear from so many of you - stay in touch and let us know where in the world you are enjoying Israel365!
 
Hi Rabbi, Greetings from Belfast. I have recently been added to your mailing list, only wish I had done it earlier. So much positive and many informative facts in the emails, and some great links. Shalom, Colin Magill

Hi, thank you for the wonderful Bible verses you sent today! I'm from the Philippines. I love listening to Israel music, its so inspiring! God bless Israel!
Shalom,
Rabbi Tuly Weisz
RabbiTuly@Israel365.com
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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Israeli Bible Museum Debuts 'Book of Books' Exhibit

Israeli Bible Museum 

Debuts 'Book of Books' Exhibit

JERUSALEM, Israel -- A unique exhibition of Bible history opened this week at Jerusalem's Bible Lands Museum.
They call it the Book of Books. The museum's latest exhibition traces the history of the Bible and the Jewish roots of Christianity, tracking the story of God's written word from the Dead Sea Scrolls to the Gutenberg Bible and beyond.
Bible Lands Museum Director Amanda Weiss says there's no more important city than Jerusalem to host such an exhibit.
"It's the first presentation of this collection of rare and important Bibles and manuscripts and biblical texts looking at the Old Testament and the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, together in one exhibition here in Jerusalem," Weiss told CBN News.
"The significance is that we are trying to show the Jewish roots of Christianity," Cary Summers, chief executive of the Green Collection, said.
"We've put in added effort to make it an equally balanced and important exhibition for both a Jewish audience and the Christian world," Weiss said.
"The exhibition begins in the Judean Desert," exhibit curator Heather Reichstadt explained. "We have a representation here of facsimiles of those Dead Sea Scrolls that belong to Amman, Jordan."
Reichstadt says the dispersion of the Jewish people in 70 A.D. sets the stage for the exhibit.
"We move into North Africa where we then start to see introduction of Greek, where you have the Septuagint, it's the Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament to Christians in the Greek language," Reichstadt continued. "After that we have the introduction of earliest New Testament text."
The artwork on the walls related directly to the exhibits, and a floor map traces the spread of God's Word throughout the world.
Interactive iPads allow visitors to zoom in on texts like a genealogy from Adam to Christ.
There's even an exact working replica of the 15th century Gutenberg Press, which printed the famous Guttenberg Bible.
"And you have a printed page. You could make several thousand in a day," Reichstadt explained.
"We do end the exhibition with one of the oldest biblical texts known to date…which is a blessing from Numbers 6:24-26, 'May the Lord bless you and keep you….'"
Most of the exhibit comes from the Green family collection, which will one day have a permanent home in Washington, D.C.
Cary Summers, the Green collection's chief executive, says they want to change the notion many people have that the Bible is not readable.
 
"We take on that challenge to provide a means for people to get comfortable reading it," Summers said. "It's literally one of the great, great writes of the world. It's fantastic. It's entertaining. It's mystery. It's everything that good movies are made of -- are found in the Bible."
More: CBN News