What an amazing opportunity I have had to be on this trip...I mean it is such a fantastic gift Jeff has given me by willingly taking over all parenting duties while I have been away. I thought possibly while I was away my family would appreciate more all that me as their mom does for them, but truly the converse has happened. I am over the top appreciative of what my family does and has done for me. I miss them like crazy!! I can't wait to hug you all next week.
Our day was emotional. But first, educational. Before, when we visited the Qumran caves, I have to admit, I was a little confused about why there was very little mention of the Dead Sea Scrolls, which I assumed was because they didn't want to add a religious bent to the exhibit, but it was weird because in Israel, everything has a religious bent. I should have known that the scrolls were too big to be contained at the Qumran site, so far removed from access to the general public. I missed the Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit at the Science Museum, and now I really wished I hadn't because we went to the Israel Museum (which is near the Knesset (Israeli parliament building) and other Israeli governmental buildings and it was just cool driving to it) where there is an awe inspiring exhibit called the Shrine of the Book. We had something like 30 minutes to try to take everything in at the Shrine and because I have an addictive disorder in which I am compelled to read everything (just ask Jeff about this problem during Vikings home games, in which I keep getting distracted from paying attention to the game because the Popcorn box has writing on it and must be read) 30 hours should have been my allotment at the Shrine. The exhibit told the story of the Essenes who preserved Scriptural writings and lived a rigid life of complete separation from society. Because of their location in the desert, when they knew the Romans were coming and hid their many scrolls in the caves, they were preserved perfectly for upwards of 2,000 years. Not only is the fact that so many scrolls were found (40,000 scroll fragments from Cave #4 alone were discovered) astounding, but even more so that the discovery is the oldest evidence for the accuracy of the text of the Hebrew Bible. The scrolls also the chronicled daily life of the Essenes, which is fascinating in and of itself, with directives from everything: eating, ritual cleansing, anything to do with daily life. They also catalogued the beliefs of this break away group.
All the books of the Hebrew Bible but Esther and Nehemiah were discovered at the caves but the Isaiah scroll was the only one preserved in its entirety. When I was a young girl, I remember my dad had a book about the Dead Sea Scrolls and I also remember him talking about the historical and religious significance of this find. I found walking through this building (which has a roof shaped like the lid of one of the jars the scrolls were discovered in) to be a walk of remembrance to my dad's own contagious excitement over the scrolls (even though they were discovered in 1947 and I was a girl much later they continue to be something that is exciting). Anyway, I loved the museum. Also, outside is a model of Jerusalem from the first century. It is huge and really helped put together many of the details we have been digesting over the past few days.
model of Jerusalem at the Israel Museum |
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The Holocaust Museum shaped like one point of a star |
a solemn reminder of the 6 million killed |
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Gordon's Calvary |
It was a beautiful day, sun shining, and I am grateful for it all. I know that even months from now, little things that maybe I have overlooked or maybe I just couldn't totally take in, will bubble to the surface of my brain and what I have seen here and learned here with stay with me always.
What an amazing day and an amazing trip. Trusting you will have moments in the days ahead to begin processing it all and reflecting back. You will never be the same--isn't that wonderful?!
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