Holy Ground: The Importance of Jerusalem for Jews

After millennia of being ruled by others, and after the horrific losses of the Holocaust, Jews the world over visit Israel to connect with their roots and behold what, against all odds, now exists as a Jewish homeland. Not every Jew has chosen to claim their legal right to immigrate to Israel, but they still feel connected in Israel to the founders of their faith and ethnicity. Their promised land is more than a collection of holy sites. It is holy in itself.

The Temple Mount

Every year at Passover Seder dinner, as Jews say to one another “Next year in Jerusalem,” they speak with hope of what’s to come. As they wait for God to reestablish an earthly kingdom for them, they journey to what they consider holy, significant places where God has historically made his dwelling among them. Jerusalem hosts two of the most important sites: the Temple and its Western Wall (“the Kotel,” in Hebrew).

The Temple’s central role traces back to the Old Testament as it housed the sacrificial system by which Jews kept the laws of the Torah and the covenant. Priests and scholars served God and instructed the community in the Temple, a place paramount to their identity as Jehovah’s people.

The Temple and the mount on which it was placed has significance that reaches back to the moment when history began. In the Jewish worldview, the Temple Mount was the site of the Garden of Eden. Melchizedek, the king of Salem—which Jews suppose to be Jerusalem—worshiped the Most High God there and blessed Abram. Abraham bound his son Isaac on the Mount, David defended and built a kingdom around it, and Solomon further anchored it in history by erecting on it the Temple of God.

Psalm 137:4 contains the Jews’ distraught cries after they lost the promised land in the exile: “How can we sing the songs of the Lord while in a foreign land?” (NIV). Losing access to the Temple and its eventual destruction created a total disorientation. Without the Temple, the literal question arose: how were they to keep their faith?

Jews believe the Temple Mount—the elevated, open space above the Western Wall—may be the location of the Holy of Holies where God’s presence dwells. Photo by Rob Bye

Today, the spacious, raised Mount of the destroyed Temple is home to two of Islam’s most sacred mosques, Al-Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock. The entire Mount is under Arab authority. Still, Jews believe the Temple Mount to be their holiest site of all. So holy, in fact, that Israel’s chief rabbinate posted a sign above the entrance discouraging Jews from even entering the site lest they stumble unprotected onto what once was the Holy of Holies. It is said that God’s presence is still there.

Today, touching the ancient stones on the Mount connects Jews to David, Abraham, and most importantly, to the presence of God on earth. The Mount is where their prayers rise up to God. Rabbis, in the centuries since the destruction of the second temple, established a system of prescribed prayers, good deeds, and repentance to replace the sacrificial system in Judaism. Since Jews no longer offer sacrifices, their prayers at special places like the Mount are all the more significant because they are expected to carry the weight once borne by sacrificed animals.

The Western Wall

Since it is within current political boundaries, the Temple Mount is inaccessible to most Jews. They feel especially connected to the Kotel as the only portion of the Temple they can touch. Tour guides often explain that though the English term “Wailing Wall” was used during the British Mandate, since the Six Day War in 1967 people have returned to using its traditional Jewish name, the Kotel, literally meaning “the wall” in ancient Hebrew. We in the West sometimes hear it referred to as the Western Wall.

Many Jews feel the closest to God at the Kotel. After a security check and a ritual handwashing at the fountains, men proceed to the Wall via the left side of a partition and women to the right. Men adorn kippot, prayer shawls, and small, black boxes with portions of the Torah inside as they rock back and forth, bow, and cry out with earnest prayers. Women in prayer cover their heads, and some sit in chairs for hours reading from prayer books.

An elderly Orthodox Jew wears tefillin as he reads the Torah in front of the Western Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem. Photo by Max Power

Some people write out prayers, roll them up, and stick them in the crevices between the stones in faith that God will answer. After prayers at the Wall, people walk backward, in respect to God, up the pathway back toward the partition’s edge.

His Kingdom Is Not of This World

As Christians, we have the chance to seek out spiritually hungry Jews for whom Jerusalem is significant and holy. Whether you are in Israel for a tour or you have Jewish friends and colleagues, you can be still, ask God who to talk to, and then approach, ask questions, and listen. Seeing the importance of the Temple Mount through their eyes will help you talk about how God gave it to the Jews as a signpost pointing to Yeshua, who is nearer to us than the ancient stones.

Everyone without Christ needs the good news, but that news can be especially sweet for Jews still living in hope of an established earthly kingdom. Christians can freely try to engage them in conversation and listen for significant, personal connections between their holy sites and their current spiritual condition.

Pray that God’s kingdom will be built in and through Jewish hearts, not with temporary, ancient stones but through submission to Yeshua the Messiah.


Bethany Singer lives in Jerusalem and has served among Muslim, Orthodox Christian, and Jewish people. She enjoys relating to people through local languages, music, and cuisine, and facilitating the worship of the one true God among the nations.

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What Is The Purpose Of Spiritual Gifts?

What Is the Purpose of Spiritual Gifts?

There has been some discussion among Christians as to the purpose of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. While some have argued that the gifts have been given to build up the individual believer the Bible makes it clear that the gifts are to be used to edify or build up the entire church. A number of points need to be emphasized.

First, Scripture specifically says that spiritual gifts are given to build up the church, the body of Christ. There were given by Jesus Christ to aid the church with its mission until He returns. These gifts from the Lord allow believers to do the work of the Christian ministry.

The Bible says that spiritual gifts are ultimately to glorify God. It is to glorify Him rather than any group or individual. Thus, individuals do not exercise spiritual gifts for their own benefit. Any benefit derived from exercising a spiritual gift is a result of using the gift, it is not the purpose of it.

Some Christians, however, see God designing spiritual gifts to benefit all concerned – the user and the recipient. However, the Scripture stresses that spiritual gifts are to be used to build up one another. While the user of the gift may benefit from the proper exercise of it, this is merely the result of being obedient to the Lord.

It is also contended that spiritual gifts give believers a foretaste of the coming age where there will be perfect health, more complete knowledge, etc.

Others however deny that this is occurring. They believe the purpose of spiritual gifts is to equip believers for the work of the ministry solely in this present age.

While there continues to be discussion among believers about these issues we can conclude that God has given the gifts of the Spirit so that all Christians will benefit from them and that He will ultimately get the glory. Of this, we can be certain.

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Holy Ground: The Importance of Jerusalem for Jews

After millennia of being ruled by others, and after the horrific losses of the Holocaust, Jews the world over visit Israel to connect with their roots and behold what, against all odds, now exists as a Jewish homeland. Not every Jew has chosen to claim their legal right to immigrate to Israel, but they still feel connected in Israel to the founders of their faith and ethnicity. Their promised land is more than a collection of holy sites. It is holy in itself.

The Temple Mount

Every year at Passover Seder dinner, as Jews say to one another “Next year in Jerusalem,” they speak with hope of what’s to come. As they wait for God to reestablish an earthly kingdom for them, they journey to what they consider holy, significant places where God has historically made his dwelling among them. Jerusalem hosts two of the most important sites: the Temple and its Western Wall (“the Kotel,” in Hebrew).

The Temple’s central role traces back to the Old Testament as it housed the sacrificial system by which Jews kept the laws of the Torah and the covenant. Priests and scholars served God and instructed the community in the Temple, a place paramount to their identity as Jehovah’s people.

The Temple and the mount on which it was placed has significance that reaches back to the moment when history began. In the Jewish worldview, the Temple Mount was the site of the Garden of Eden. Melchizedek, the king of Salem—which Jews suppose to be Jerusalem—worshiped the Most High God there and blessed Abram. Abraham bound his son Isaac on the Mount, David defended and built a kingdom around it, and Solomon further anchored it in history by erecting on it the Temple of God.

Psalm 137:4 contains the Jews’ distraught cries after they lost the promised land in the exile: “How can we sing the songs of the Lord while in a foreign land?” (NIV). Losing access to the Temple and its eventual destruction created a total disorientation. Without the Temple, the literal question arose: how were they to keep their faith?

Jews believe the Temple Mount—the elevated, open space above the Western Wall—may be the location of the Holy of Holies where God’s presence dwells. Photo by Rob Bye

Today, the spacious, raised Mount of the destroyed Temple is home to two of Islam’s most sacred mosques, Al-Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock. The entire Mount is under Arab authority. Still, Jews believe the Temple Mount to be their holiest site of all. So holy, in fact, that Israel’s chief rabbinate posted a sign above the entrance discouraging Jews from even entering the site lest they stumble unprotected onto what once was the Holy of Holies. It is said that God’s presence is still there.

Today, touching the ancient stones on the Mount connects Jews to David, Abraham, and most importantly, to the presence of God on earth. The Mount is where their prayers rise up to God. Rabbis, in the centuries since the destruction of the second temple, established a system of prescribed prayers, good deeds, and repentance to replace the sacrificial system in Judaism. Since Jews no longer offer sacrifices, their prayers at special places like the Mount are all the more significant because they are expected to carry the weight once borne by sacrificed animals.

The Western Wall

Since it is within current political boundaries, the Temple Mount is inaccessible to most Jews. They feel especially connected to the Kotel as the only portion of the Temple they can touch. Tour guides often explain that though the English term “Wailing Wall” was used during the British Mandate, since the Six Day War in 1967 people have returned to using its traditional Jewish name, the Kotel, literally meaning “the wall” in ancient Hebrew. We in the West sometimes hear it referred to as the Western Wall.

Many Jews feel the closest to God at the Kotel. After a security check and a ritual handwashing at the fountains, men proceed to the Wall via the left side of a partition and women to the right. Men adorn kippot, prayer shawls, and small, black boxes with portions of the Torah inside as they rock back and forth, bow, and cry out with earnest prayers. Women in prayer cover their heads, and some sit in chairs for hours reading from prayer books.

An elderly Orthodox Jew wears tefillin as he reads the Torah in front of the Western Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem. Photo by Max Power

Some people write out prayers, roll them up, and stick them in the crevices between the stones in faith that God will answer. After prayers at the Wall, people walk backward, in respect to God, up the pathway back toward the partition’s edge.

His Kingdom Is Not of This World

As Christians, we have the chance to seek out spiritually hungry Jews for whom Jerusalem is significant and holy. Whether you are in Israel for a tour or you have Jewish friends and colleagues, you can be still, ask God who to talk to, and then approach, ask questions, and listen. Seeing the importance of the Temple Mount through their eyes will help you talk about how God gave it to the Jews as a signpost pointing to Yeshua, who is nearer to us than the ancient stones.

Everyone without Christ needs the good news, but that news can be especially sweet for Jews still living in hope of an established earthly kingdom. Christians can freely try to engage them in conversation and listen for significant, personal connections between their holy sites and their current spiritual condition.

Pray that God’s kingdom will be built in and through Jewish hearts, not with temporary, ancient stones but through submission to Yeshua the Messiah.


Bethany Singer lives in Jerusalem and has served among Muslim, Orthodox Christian, and Jewish people. She enjoys relating to people through local languages, music, and cuisine, and facilitating the worship of the one true God among the nations.

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What makes Jerusalem so holy?

Jerusalem – its name resonates in the hearts of Christians, Jews and Muslims alike and echoes through centuries of shared and disputed history.

Known in Hebrew as Yerushalayim and in Arabic as al-Quds, it is one of the oldest cities in the world. It has been conquered, destroyed and rebuilt time and again, and every layer of its earth reveals a different piece of the past.Media caption,

Tour guide Shraga Ben Yosef provides a quick trip around Jerusalem’s holiest sites

While it has often been the focus of stories of division and conflict among people of different religions, they are united in their reverence for this holy ground.

At its core is the Old City, a maze of narrow alleyways and historic architecture that characterises its four quarters – Christian, Muslim, Jewish and Armenian. It is surrounded by a fortress-like stone wall and home to some of the holiest sites in the world.

Each quarter represents its own population. The Christians have two, because Armenians are also Christians, and their quarter, the smallest of the four, is one of the oldest Armenian centres in the world.

It is unique in that their community has preserved its own particular culture and civilisation inside the St James Church and monastery, which comprises most of their section.

The church

Inside the Christian Quarter is the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a significant focus for Christians all over the world. It is located on a site which is central to the story of Jesus, his death, crucifixion and resurrection.

According to most Christian traditions, Jesus was crucified there, on Golgotha, or the hill of Calvary, his tomb is located inside the sepulchre and this was also the site of his resurrection.

The church is managed jointly by representatives of different Christian denominations, mainly the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate, Franciscan friars from the Roman Catholic Church and the Armenian Patriarchate, but also by the Ethiopians, Coptics and Syrian Orthodox Church.

It is one of the main pilgrimage destinations for millions of Christians worldwide who visit the empty tomb of Jesus and seek solace and redemption in prayer at the site.Media caption,

Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theophilus III explains why Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre is the holiest place in Christianity

The mosque

The Muslim Quarter is the largest of the four and contains the shrine of the Dome of Rock and the al-Aqsa Mosque on a plateau known to Muslims as Haram al-Sharif, or the Noble Sanctuary.

The mosque is the third holiest site in Islam and is under the administration of an Islamic trust called the Waqf.

Muslims believe the Prophet Muhammad travelled here from Mecca during his night journey and prayed with the souls of all the prophets. A few steps away, the shrine of the Dome of the Rock holds the foundation stone, where Muslims believe Muhammad then ascended to heaven.

Muslims visit the holy site all year round, but every Friday during the holy month of Ramadan, hundreds of thousands of Muslims come to pray at the mosque.Media caption,

Sheikh Azzam al-Khatib al-Tamimi explains the importance of Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque to Islam

The wall

The Jewish Quarter is home to the Kotel, or the Western Wall, a remnant of the retaining wall of the mount on which the Holy Temple once stood.

Inside the temple was the Holy of Holies, the most sacred site in Judaism.

Jews believe that this was the location of the foundation stone from which the world was created, and where Abraham prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac. Many Jews believe the Dome of the Rock is the site of the Holy of Holies.

Today, the Western Wall is the closest place Jews can pray to the Holy of Holies.

It is managed by the Rabbi of the Western Wall and every year hosts millions of visitors. Jewish people from all over the world visit this place to pray and connect to their heritage, especially during the High Holidays.

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7 Gifts of the Holy Spirit

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states:

The Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit are Wisdom, Understanding, Counsel, Fortitude, Knowledge, Piety, and Fear of the Lord. They belong in their fullness to Christ, Son of David. They complete and perfect the virtues of those who receive them. They make the faithful docile in readily obeying divine inspirations. (CCC, 1831)

The Catholic Church derives this information on the Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit from scripture:

​​The Spirit of the LORD will rest on Him, The spirit of wisdom and understanding, The spirit of counsel and strength, The spirit of knowledge and the fear of the LORD. And He will delight in the fear of the LORD, And He will not judge by what His eyes see, Nor make a decision by what His ears hear; But with righteousness He will judge the poor, And decide with fairness for the afflicted of the earth; And He will strike the earth with the rod of His mouth, And with the breath of His lips He will slay the wicked. (Isaiah 11:2-4) 

Picture

1. Wisdom

​Wisdom is not the quoting of facts. Wisdom is a gift that allows a person to understand things from God’s point of view. In other words, Wisdom allows a person to recognize truth. A person with the Gift of Wisdom is able to take this truth and use it to glorify God by choosing Godly solutions to problems. 

2. Understanding

Understanding is the second gift of the Holy Spirit, and people sometimes have a hard time understanding (no pun intended) how it differs from wisdom. While wisdom is the desire to contemplate the things of God, understanding allows us grasp, at least in a limited way, the very essence of the truths of the Catholic Faith. Through understanding, we gain a certitude about our beliefs that moves beyond faith

3. Counsel

​The Gift of Counsel is also known as a Gift of Right Judgment. Counsel, the third gift of the Holy Spirit, is the perfection of the cardinal virtue of prudence

. Prudence can be practiced by anyone, but counsel is supernatural. Through this gift of the Holy Spirit, we are able to judge how best to act almost by intuition. Because of the gift of counsel, Christians need not fear to stand up for the truths of the Faith, because the Holy Spirit will guide us in defending those truths.

4. Fortitude

​The Gift of Fortitude is also known as the Gift of Courage. Through this Gift a person is no longer afraid to stand up for God and His truths. A person who has the Gift of Fortitude will stand up for good against evil and is convicted to take a stand when the occasion arises.

5. Knowledge

​The Gift of Knowledge allows a person to understand the meaning and purpose God has for him and to live up to this meaning. It differs from wisdom in that it is an action, not just a desire to live up to the ways of God. It differs from Understanding in that it is not just ability, it is a knowing.

​6. Piety

Piety, the sixth gift of the Holy Spirit, is the perfection of the virtue of religion. While we tend to think of religion today as the external elements of our faith, it really means the willingness to worship and to serve God. Piety takes that willingness beyond a sense of duty, so that we desire to worship God and to serve Him out of love, the way that we desire to honor our parents and do what they wish.

​7. Fear of the Lord

​The Gift of Fear of the Lord puts God in the proper perspective. A person with this Gift understands the greatness and awesomeness of the Lord. They want to serve Him because of who He is. A person with the Gift of Fear of the Lord understands who they are and why they are here in relationship to God; In other words, everything they are is due to the wonder, love, grace, and perfection of God. They are totally dependent on the Lord as a child is to a parent. The Gift of Fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom. Once a person understands who God is and desires to please Him, they can begin to understand things from God’s point of view or have Wisdom.

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