Holy War: Where Was Jesus the Prince of Peace Baptized?
0 views
Skip to first unread message
Pastor Dale Morgan
unread,
Sep 1, 2011, 2:43:30 PM9/1/11
Reply to author
Sign in to reply to author
Forward
Sign in to forward
Delete
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
Perilous
Times
Holy War: Where Was Jesus the Prince of Peace Baptized?
There may be some bad feelings wafting across the Jordan River.
But, even in a now more tense Middle East, the relationship
between the Hashemite kingdom of Jordan and the State of Israel is
pretty well-tempered. There is constant contact between their
intelligence services; there is cooperative work being done to
rescue the Dead Sea from being no sea at all; the two countries
coordinate research on the 500 million birds which migrate between
them in the Jordan rift valley, the crossing from Asia and Europe
to Africa ... and back; there is tourism between the monarchy and
the democracy, more from the latter, but still. It is also true
that since the Arab Spring, King Abdullah has been under some
popular stress (mostly from Palestinians under his rule, 60
percent of the population, after all). The old folk song telling
us that “the river is deep and the river is wide” is not quite
accurate.
And it certainly is neither deep nor wide at the two points on
opposite sides of the river where Jesus was said to have been
baptized by John. The new item of conflict is: Which side was he
on? The east bank or the west bank? Alas, John is not here to
answer the query “which side were you on?” So the Israelis and the
Jordanians are in competition with the question to us: “Which side
are you on?”
Here, from the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), is a
fair-minded report on this newest of holy wars:
Several weeks ago, Israel officially reopened the Qasr
Al-Yahoud baptism site on the west bank of the Jordan, near
Jericho, which has been largely kept closed since 1967. The site
is traditionally believed to be the location of Christ’s baptism,
and is one of the most important destinations for Christian
pilgrims.
The opening of the Israeli site angered Jordan, which operates
a baptismal site on the east bank of the river, in Al-Maghtas
(also known as Bethany-beyond-the-Jordan). The Jordanian
government protested that the Jordanian site is the authentic one,
and that it had been recognized as such by the Vatican and by Pope
John Paul II, who attended its inauguration in 2000. Jordan
accused Israel of falsifying history and the Christian faith and
of trying to undermine Christian tourism to Jordan. It even filed
a complaint to this effect with the Vatican.
It should be noted that the Jordanian and the Israeli sites
directly face each other across the Jordan River, which is only a
few meters wide at that point (see photos below). The conflict is
therefore mainly over the Christian tourism to the area, with
Jordan’s concern being that the opening of the Israeli site will
mean fewer visitors to the Jordanian site.
It is still just a piece of history in the life of “the prince of
peace.” So maybe the conflict will just simmer and die. But if you
want all the details, here they are.
Thank God there are no Muslims in this religious quarrel. They
have enough on their plate.