THE GALILEE, ISRAEL – (ANS)- “Go, walk through the
length and breadth of the land, for I am giving it to you.” Genesis
13:17
Eduward
has been in Israel for three months, living in Jerusalem and volunteering for
the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem, before he made his first trip to
the Galilee.
Like many tourists, the Galilee was not at the top of Eduward’s list of
things to do. However, after an invitation to walk the newly redeveloped Gospel
Trail prompted him to visit, Eduward quickly realized that the Galilee offers
much more than he had ever anticipated.
Walking where Jesus walked was an emotional trip and the high point of
Eduward’s visit to Israel.
“I’m recommending the Gospel Trail to everyone – Christian and even
Jewish people as well, so they can experience where Jesus walked, see the
scenery and hike the trail,” Eduward told www.Travelujah.com
Jesus spent the majority of his life growing up in Nazareth, working in the
community, walking the countryside, bringing his ministry of teaching and
healing throughout the region and performing numerous miracles along the way
from Cana to Tabgha.
Even still, Nazareth and the Galilee as a whole have not yet evolved as an
international destination and tourism to the region pales in comparison to
Jerusalem. While more than 87 percent of Christian tourists visit Jerusalem,
only 60 percent of Israel’s Christian tourists visit the Galilee, up from less
than 50 percent in 2009.
Why does the Galilee attract fewer Christians despite the fact that Jesus
spent most of his life there?
Part of the answer lies in the fact that the Galilee region, despite
offering an abundance of important sites, is relatively “off the beaten
path’ and not as easy to navigate on foot as Jerusalem, which hosts a
concentration of sites proximate to each other.
In an effort to address this, the Israel Ministry of Tourism, along with its
partners at the Jewish National Fund, began planning the Gospel Trail, a
60-kilometer hiking trail, 10 years ago. However, once the second intifada took
root prompting a sharp drop in tourism plans for the Gospel Trail were put on
hold.
Fast
forward several years to 2010. Israel had experienced a dramatic rise in
Christian tourism culminating in a record-breaking 2.3 million Christian
tourists, representing two thirds of the 3.45 million tourists who visited the
country in 2010. The Christian sector was demonstrating the strongest growth of
all sectors too. While Jewish tourism had grown from 800,000 to 1 million in
the last five years, Christian tourism was up over fourfold, from just under
500,000 tourists in 2005 to 2.3 million tourists in 2010. Tourism officials
made the Gospel Trail a priority and, at a cost of $600,000, the well-marked
trail was unveiled a couple months ago.
The Gospel Trail begins at the Mount of Precipice in Nazareth where,
according to Luke 4:14-28, Jesus was rejected by his townsmen who threatened to
throw him over the mountainside. The trail travels down the ancient
“Pilgrims Path” 500 meters to the Jezreel Valley below, and continues
along the Nazareth Range providing views of the Mount Tabor, Kafr Kanna and
travels, via the golani Junction to the Horns of Hattin site of the clash between
the Crusader forces and the Muslim armies under Saladin. It continues past the
antiquities of Magdala to Tabgha, the Mount of Beatitudes, eventually ending at
Capernaum and the Sea of Galilee.
The Gospel Trail experience offers the Christian faithful a unique opportunity
to take a similar path to the one that Jesus would have trodden.
Additional branches of the trail will allow visitors to access other
important sites. A new dock alongside Capernaum allows visitors to include a
boat ride on the Sea of Galilee, where according to Mark 4:35, Jesus calmed the
sea. With a ride to Ein Gev or Tiberias, groups can have the possibility of
including prayer time or singing on the boat. Scripture readings, safety
barriers, shaded rest areas and safety features are to be included and are
expected to be in place along the trail shortly.
The
Gospel Trail is part of the Israel Ministry of Tourism’s effort to broaden
Israel’s tourism product and reach new market segments like hikers and
Christian youth groups. Pilgrimage is viewed as a natural means to
self-discovery and attracts young people seeking to connect to their spiritual
roots.
Father Atuire, director of Opera Romana Pellegrinaggi, the Vatican
pilgrimage organizer responsible for organizing programs for 750,000 pilgrims
annually, has been actively seeking to reach out to more Christians including
youths, by offering alternative journeys of faith such as walking pilgrimages
to Santiago de Compostela as well as social justice tours of Nepal and packages
to World Youth Day.
The Gospel Trail is envisioned to serve a similar purpose: to connect youths
to pilgrimage by walking in Jesus’ footsteps. Pilgrimage is viewed as a natural
means to self-discovery and attracts young people seeking to connect to their
spiritual roots.
Latin Patriarchal Vicar Bishop Boutros Marcuzzo accompanied us along a leg
of the Gospel Trail and echoed his desire for young people to have a direct and
spontaneous interaction with nature along the way.
“We want young people to come,” he told Travelujah. “And this
trail is very encouraging for young people.”
The Gospel Trail was developed in consultation with Evangelical, Protestant
and Orthodox church leaders and provides pilgrims and others an opportunity to
experience the Holy Land on foot while connecting in a spiritual and physical
way to the Biblical landscapes that feature in Jesus’ life.
The
Gospel Trail comes on the heels of another popular northern Israel hike also
catering to Christian tourists, the Jesus Trail. The Jesus Trail follows a
similar route as the new Gospel Trail and to a large extent serves the same
function. However, the Jesus Trail encourages a bit more diversity as it passes
through some outlying Arab villages in the Galilee while the Gospel Trail,
focuses more on exploring the indigenous nature of the region.
By highlighting their connection to important holy sites, both bring a
much-needed awareness to the Galilee, a region that is still often overlooked
by visitors to Israel, though, perhaps, not for much longer.
“Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues,
proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and healing every disease and
sickness among the people. News about him spread all over Syria, and people
brought to him all who were ill with various diseases, those suffering severe
pain, the demon-possessed, those having seizures, and the paralyzed; and he
healed them. Large crowds from Galilee, the Decapolis, Jerusalem, Judea and the
region across the Jordan followed him.” Matthew 4:23-25
You can see a video about the Gospel Trail at http://www.travelujah.com/blogs/entry/Walking-in-Jesus-s-Footsteps-along-the-Galilee-s-Gospel-Trail
About Elisa Moed
Elisa Moed is the Founder and CEO of www.Travelujah.com,
the largest Christian social network focused on the Holy Land travel.
People can learn, plan and share their travel experiences on Travelujah.Elisa Moed is also a special contributor from Israel for the Assist News Service – www.assistnews.net
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