Church of the Holy Sepulchre





















 After taking a nap and eating an early dinner, I decided to walk back to the old city to check out Church of the Holy Sepulchre which is not as busy after 6 pm. It is the most holy Christian spot in the world. Its history began in the fourth century, when the Bishop of the Christian community of Jerusalem discovered a tomb that has since become almost universally accepted as the burial place of Christ. I was still in a queue for an hour or more to enter the tiny tomb chamber. 

Today, it is shared by several Christian denominations, including the Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Armenian Apostolic churches. I ran into a service on site.

“The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is a complex building that includes several chapels, each with its own religious significance. The most important of these chapels is the Tomb of Christ, which is believed to be the site where Jesus was buried and resurrected. The church also contains the Stone of Unction, where Jesus’ body was anointed before his burial, and the Chapel of the Finding of the Cross, where the True Cross was discovered by Saint Helena, the mother of Constantine.”

I decided to take a different route back to the hostel, and walked via expensive shopping and dining areas.

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