When my daughter was little, I rocked her to sleep every
night and sang the same song: Jesus, There Is Something About That
Name. One line in song says, “Kings
and kingdoms shall all pass away, but there is something about that name.” My daughter is now the mother of three. When her
children were little, she sang the same song to them.
A few years ago, my wife and I chose to launch our 50th
year of marriage with a trip to Israel. We spent several days in Jerusalem,
walking through the Garden of Gethsemane, looking on the Holy City from the
Mount of Olives, visiting the Pool of Siloam and the Western Wall. We sat on the Southern steps to the temple and
walked the Via Dolorosa.
Everywhere we went we were shoulder to shoulder with people
from all over the world, tourists who had come to walk where Jesus walked. We met a young man from New Zealand, another
from Colombia, entire groups from Indonesia, China and Korea. They came from
Africa, South America and Europe. They
were Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant, Non-denominational. They came from everywhere. Tour buses lined up on the streets of the
city, in spite of the political tensions reported in the news. They came
because “there is something about that Name.”
We visited the Trans-Jordan site, just above the Dead Sea,
the most likely place where Jesus was baptized by John. A barbed wire fence runs down the middle of
the Jordan River separating Israel from Jordan.
Armed guards are visible. On the
other side of the river, beyond the barbed-wire fence, a group of Orthodox
believers were baptizing, joyfully and with passion. Separated by politics and
boundaries, we could not speak to them or touch them, but, like us, they were
drawn to that site because Jesus was there.
In Jerusalem most of the actual places where Jesus walked
are buried, beneath many layers. The
temple of His day, built by Herod, was destroyed in 70 AD. Only the supporting walls remained, including
the western wall where hundreds gather to pray every day.
In the 2nd century the Roman Emperor Hadrian
rebuilt Jerusalem as a pagan city with a temple to Jupiter. After 325, Emperor
Constantine rebuilt the city as a Christian center. Islamic rulers conquered
the city in 638, the Crusaders in 1099. It was conquered by Saladin in 1187.
Its walls were destroyed in 1219 then repaired in 1243. It was taken over by
the Ottoman Empire in 1517. Jerusalem
has been conquered, destroyed and rebuilt numerous times.
According to Thomas L. Friedman in his book, From Beirut
to Jerusalem, Neil Armstrong visited Israel and stood on the steps to the
Temple entrance. He asked his guide,
archeologist Meir Ben Dov, if these were the same steps Jesus walked on. Ben Dov confirmed that they were. “I have to
tell you,” Armstrong said, “I am more excited stepping on these stones than I
was stepping on the moon.”
The very stones of the city, with the numerous archeological
digs, bear witness to history. Kings and
kingdoms have come and gone. But the name of Jesus remains. 2000 years after Jesus first walked the
streets of Jerusalem, His name continues to transform people of every language,
culture and nation who trust in Him.
No comments:
Post a Comment