Flower

Flower

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Our Pilgrimage into the Holy Land-In a Nutshell

"Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make straight your paths." Proverbs 3:5-6



At the beginning of our pilgrimage, we were asked to imagine that Jesus was asking us the following question: "Who do you say that I am?" Before following in His footsteps through the Holy Land, my answer was that You, Jesus, are the Son of God. You are my friend, and my brother. You came to save me. You gave your life for me. You did the ultimate sacrifice.

Today, after having experienced a 10-day pilgrimage in the Holy Land, following Jesus, where He lived, where He walked, where He performed His first miracle, my answer is the same as it was at the beginning, but it's also so much more. You, Jesus, are the Messiah. You could have walked away from the crucifixion, but You chose to go through with it because You love me so much. And even though, during your human life, You lived in Israel and Egypt, today, You live everywhere. You are not confined to a particular place. You live in my heart, so I take You with me wherever I go. You are my best friend. And You want me to take your message to others. You want me to be Your hands and Your feet... like You told me in the Church of the Ascension when I was looking at the imprint of your foot on the rock. So who do I say that You are? You are my Everything.

This pilgrimage was life changing, but not only because of what I saw, but because of what I felt, and because of the messages that I received while I was there, and that I am still receiving as I meditate on the journey. Jesus' love for us is perfect. The love we feel for our children or our parents or our spouses is nothing in comparison to the love that He feels for us. And I was able to feel that love in every step I took through His Holy Land. Even when the food was not great, and we were tired of eating hummus every day, there was love in the persons that prepared it and in those that served us. Even when we were pushed aside and punched while we waited to visit the Holy Sepulchre, there was love as our group united through that experience. Even in the roughness of the people, there was love because they, just like us, wanted a glimpse of the tomb of our Lord. There is love in the faith of the Jewish community who return to Jerusalem every year to celebrate their Passover, just like Jesus did 2,000 years ago. There was love in the Spanish pilgrims that we encountered at the Church of the Dormition, as we united to sing and pray together. There was love at the Wailing Wall, when hundreds and hundreds of people from different backgrounds and different faiths, united in prayer to God.


I was very touched as well by all the Marian sites that we visited: the Church of the Annunciation, the Church of St. Anne, the Church of the Visitation, the Church of the Dormition, the Church of the Nativity, the Church at Cana, and the Church of St. Joseph. I have always had a special place in my heart for Mama Mary, especially since I became a mother myself almost thirty years ago, but after seeing how she lived and the sacrifices she made first hand, now I have great admiration for the Woman. She was all about love and service. She placed herself last. The needs of others always came before hers. And it did not matter if she had to go on a 3-day journey or a 10-day journey in top of a donkey, through hills and valleys. She just went. Her love for God surpassed any other love. She also knew what perfect love was all about. And perfect love required immense sacrifice, but she never asked questions and she never said "no." She is my hero and my role model to follow, and I know, that no matter how hard I try, I will always fall short because there has never lived another woman like her, and there will never be another one like her. She was full of grace, and she was immaculate. But she suffered greatly, and she never uttered a single complaint. I take my hat off to her, and I hope I can be just one tiny particle of the Woman and Mother that she is. And may we never forget that she shines, just like the moon, because she reflects the light of her Son. And she will always lead us to Him.


I cannot pick one favorite place or thing from the entire pilgrimage because every single place and every single thing that I experienced was special. Even the Dead Sea... which is probably my least favorite, had something unique, and there was something to learn from the experience... The whole package (the places we visited, the priests, the guides, our fellow pilgrims) was what made this experience so wonderful and amazing. Even if I were to come back in the future, it would never be the same.

Israel, the country, is very interesting. Its people, the ones that live there, are a mixture of cultures. Some are extremely friendly and happy, while others are rude and dry. The most popular animal is the cat.


Yes, even more popular than the camel.


There were cats everywhere, even in the places we stopped to eat. They were the kings, and would walk between our legs when we least expected it.

I did not feel unsafe at any point while in Israel. We walked through the streets of Jerusalem at night on our own, and through the streets of Tiberias, and people were having a good time just like in any other part of the world. Yes, bad things happen there, but they also happen in any part of the world. We saw high security, mostly in Jerusalem, but it did not scare us, on the contrary, it gave us peace of mind. There were areas that were well kept, while there were others that were dirty and abandoned. But overall, the country is beautiful, with a mixture of desert


and greenery.


The flowers are absolutely gorgeous and at this time of the year they were blooming everywhere.


And the food... well, let's just say I don't want to get anywhere near Mediterranean food for a very long time. And because it was Passover, I have never craved bread so much in my life, not even when I gave it up for Lent a few years ago. But all in all, we had good and plenty of food everywhere we ate.

Israel is definitely a country I would recommend to anyone to visit, not just for the religious experience but because of its culture and history. Of course, the religious aspect is the icing on the cake. And as the sign on the Church of St. Catherine said: "I am hoping that if you visit Israel as a tourist, you will exit as a pilgrim. And if you enter as a pilgrim, you will exit as a holier one."


I am thankful for the journey, and for the candle that is still burning bright in my heart from having lived through this pilgrimage. And I thank every person that shared this pilgrimage with me because each one added flavor to the experience. I entered the Holy Land as a pilgrim, and I definitely left as a much holier one.

Saturday, April 7, 2018

Our Pilgrimage into the Holy Land-Day 10

April 7, 2018: Emmaus Nicopolis-Notre Dame

“Now on that same day two of them were going to a village called Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem... While they were talking and discussing, Jesus himself came near and went with them, but their eyes were kept from recognizing him. When he was at the table with them, he took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized him; and he vanished from their sight. They said to each other, ‘Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?’” Luke 24:13, 15-16, 30-32


Today we got to sleep a little longer, but by 9:30 am, we were on our way to Emmaus. Eusebius, one of the Church fathers, identified Emmaus Nicopolis as being the Emmaus from the Bible.


Cleopas was one of the two that identified Jesus on the way to Emmaus, and his house is there. The community of the Beautitudes runs this place which is absolutely beautiful. It would be such a perfect setting for a retreat.


We were blessed that five Belen Emmaus sisters were pilgrims on this journey. What a special gift to share this amazing experience together, as well as with all the new friends that we have made on this journey.


The Emmaus mass was very special. We started by singing the Emmaus song “Are not our hearts burning within us...” The main reading, of course, was the Emmaus reading from Luke 24:13-35.

In his homily, Father Willie shared two stories. The first one was from when he was a student at Belen. They went to Arroyo La Vieja, in the Dominican Republic, to build a road to connect to the town. There was a huge stone in the middle of the road that obstructed the passage. Father Willie and the other boys that were there, decided that they had to remove the stone if they were going to succeed in building the road. They tried to break the stone with picks and shovels. They were exhausted, all sweaty, and the stone would not budge. In the meantime, the campesinos that were with them, sat on the side of the road, and they were laughing at them while watching them struggle. Eventually, another group of campesinos came over, and they started setting a place around and in top of the stone that looked like a barbecue. Father Willie for sure thought that they were going to have a cookout. Then they turned on the fire. Little by little, the stone began to get red and very hot. The stone was on fire. This time, it was Father Willie and his Belen friends who were sitting down on the side of the road, looking at the show. When the stone was as hot as it could get, the campesinos came with buckets of very cold water, and they threw it at the rock. And just like that, the huge rock broke apart.

Right now, our hearts are on fire because of this amazing ten-day pilgrimage that we just completed. But tomorrow, we return to Miami. Our friends and family did not experience this pilgrimage, so they will not understand the “high” that we are feeling. When we try to explain it to them, we are going to get hit with a bucket of cold water. This will quench the fire that we are feeling. So what should we do to keep our hearts on fire?


Father Willie shared with us another story. Years ago, he took a group of students on retreat to Spring Hills College in Alabama. On one of the nights, they had a very special and touching ceremony with candles. One of the boys asked him: “Father Willie, here we are with our hearts on fire, but what happens when we return to Miami?” Father Willie had the perfect answer to this question. He told them that in order to keep their hearts burning within them, they had to pray daily; they should go to mass more often than just on Sundays; and they should read the Bible to learn the Scriptures.

He felt very good about his answer, when Gaby, a football player who was not the sharpest tool in the shed, raised his hand. Father Willie thought to himself, “Oh no, here comes Gaby. He’s going to ruin the momentum.” But he allowed him to talk.

Gaby says: “Father Willie, I was thinking that earlier, when we had our candles lit up, the wind was threatening to blow out the candles. I had to cover them with my hands, block the wind with my body, in order to keep my candle from being turned off. I was thinking that it’s the same when we return to Miami. We will need to block off the people and things that are threatening to turn off the fire in our hearts.”

Father Willie was very excited with Gaby’s analogy. But Gaby wanted to keep talking. Father Willie wanted to tell him to stop talking while he was ahead, but Gaby added: “And I was also thinking that if my candle was blown out by the wind, all I had to do was turn to the person next to me, and light my candle with his. It’s the same when we return to Miami. We need to surround ourselves with people whose hearts are on fire, so if our fire gets turned off, all we need to do is get near them so that they can relight our fire.”

Father Willie was jumping with joy. Gaby had hit it right on the nail.

He also told us that as married couples, we are called to help each other to keep our candles lit. If my fire is running low, I need to turn to my spouse and allow him to help me keep the candle lit. If he’s candle is turning off, I need to help him turn it back on.

As Father Willie finished his homily, a yellow butterfly flew behind him. What a perfect ending to this amazing pilgrimage.

Afterwards, we walked around the gardens, and we found the Adoration Chapel. We had to climb to an attic. The Blessed Sacrament was exposed below. It was beautiful, and peaceful. God has been present throughout this entire trip, but here at Emmaus, He was present in a very special way.


Afterwards, we went to have lunch at Notre Dame. Finally, we had a different type of lunch. We ate a delicious baked chicken with mashed potatoes, and they had a huge selection of desserts.

Notre Dame is a towering French cathedral and guest house located across from the Old City’s New Gate.


It has a gorgeous chapel on the second floor.


They also have a very interesting museum with a replica of the Shroud of Turin. Only a small group of us went to the museum, and it was perfect because there was no one else there. Father Willie gave us a private tour and an explanation of everything we saw there.

While the exhibit at Notre Dame doesn’t claim conclusively that the Shroud belonged to Jesus, it shows the suffering of a man tortured and crucified in the same manner as Christ, according to Gospel accounts. “What matters for the believer, is that the Shroud is a mirror of the Gospel,” the late Pope John Paul II said in 1998. “The image it presents has such a profound relationship with what the Gospels tell of Jesus’ passion and death that every sensitive person feels inwardly touched and moved at beholding it.”

The exhibit contains an actual-size copy of the Shroud plus vast information on its history and the scientific research done on the material and the sufferings evidenced on it. From the studies they have done, they have been able to determine the type and size of the instruments that were used to cause the injuries that are engraved in the Shroud. They have on display, the crown of thorns;


the nails used at the crucifixion;


and the whips that were used during the Flagellation.


Regardless of whether the Shroud was the one used to embalm the body of Jesus or someone else’s, the exhibit helped us to become better acquainted with the suffering Jesus went through in this very city.

The biggest revelation came when Father Willie removed a cloth that was covering a life size statue made in bronze which was casted from the image revealed in the Shroud. It showed the type of man that had been crucified and later covered with that particular Shroud. We all felt that we were looking at a statue of Jesus.


After such a powerful exhibit, we went to wait for the bus, but traffic was horrible, worse than Miami during rush hour. It was taking too long for the bus to return, so a group of us walked back to the hotel which was about a twenty minute walk. This gave us some time to rest, and pack, since tomorrow, we will need to wake up at 2 am.

Before dinner, we had an award presentation. We each got a rose and a diploma for completing the pilgrimage at the Holy Land. 


We also gave a wedding gift to our amazing tour guides, Shuki and Ana, who are getting married on May 14th. Maria found a beautiful wedding card in one of the shops, and she bought it for them. Manny wrote a special message and Jewish prayer in his beautiful calligraphy, and we all signed it. We gave it to them with a generous gift. 


And we pray that they have a beautiful and long marriage together, because not only do they make a beautiful couple, they complement each other perfectly.

We also thanked our two awesome priests, Father Willie and Father Frank. We were so blessed to have them both on this pilgrimage. And last but not least, Patricio, our tour guide from Miami, who did an amazing job of organizing 73 pilgrims. Everything, from the hotels we stayed in, the meals that were provided, the buses, the places we visited, and our private masses, was planned to the last minimal detail, thus enhancing our experience.

We had dinner at hotel on this last night, which gave us the opportunity to share some good anecdotes with our fellow pilgrims. 



Friday, April 6, 2018

Our Pilgrimage into the Holy Land-Day 9

Friday, April 6, 2018: Masada-Qumran-The Dead Sea

“The Lord spoke to Moses, saying: Command the Israelites, and say to them: When you enter the land of Canaan (this is the land that shall fall to you for an inheritance, the land of Canaan, defined by its boundaries), your south sector shall extend from the wilderness of Zin along the side of Edom. Your southern boundary shall begin from the end of the Dead Sea on the east.” Numbers 34:1-3


Our day today was the least religious of all the days in our trip. Our first stop was at Sea Level, where we got off to play with this cute desert creature:


We then drove through the desert for miles and miles.


We then went to Masada. Its name means “fortress,” and that is the role it played for both Herod the Great and the Jewish resisters who held out here during the First Jewish Revolt against Rome. Herod the Great used the natural resources of the cliff as the foundation for a luxury palace and lookout station that doubled as a safe house to which he could flee if his relationship deteriorated either with his Jewish subjects or with his Roman patrons. The Western Palace was the first royal residence built here. Eventually Herod built a second royal palace on the north side of Masada, where afternoon shade promised cooler temperatures. The three-tiered Northern Palace seems to defy gravity, clinging to the northern ledge of the cliff like a bird ready to fly off the rocks.


Our visit took us only to the Northern Palace. We took a gondola to get up there.


We had beautiful views of the desert and the Dead Sea below. 


Even though it was early in the morning, it was pretty hot. Imagine coming here in the summer when the temperatures reach over 100 degrees. Just to the south of the Northern Palace is a very well-preserved Roman bathhouse. We walked through the multiple rooms as the ancients did, starting in the changing room and then moving through a series of bathing rooms.


While there, Shuki told us the story of Masada. After the Romans defeated Jerusalem in 70 AD, some of the Jewish soldiers fled to Masada. It took two years for the Romans to find them, but when they did, they showed up in force. The Roman general, Silva, ordered the construction of a ten-foot wall that encircled Masada, cutting off supply or flight. He then brought fifteen thousand soldiers into the arena and housed them in eight square, stone-lined camps. We can still see the remains of the wall and camps at the base of the cliff. 


Knowing that the 967 Jewish men, women, and children could hold out against them for a long time, Silva initiated the construction of a siege ramp on the west side of Masada to bring his assault weapons to destroy the defensive walls. As the Roman soldiers made final preparations for the assault on Masada, the Jewish families agreed to an unthinkable plan. Each father would end the lives of his family members. Ten men were chosen to kill the surviving fathers, and one individual (chosen by lot) would execute the nine before taking his own life. That is how the plan unfolded as told by the first- century Jewish historian Josephus. It is the powerful story that lives in the archaeological remains.

When Rome dominated a region, it expected those living there to show allegiance by adopting the worship of pagan deities linked to Roman rule. This demand raised a question for those at Masada: How may we best live or die when faced by a dominating power that demands allegiance to other gods? That was the question that probably made the Jewish families take such a drastic decision. They chose to die, rather than pledge allegiance to other gods.

After we left Masada, we went to Qumran for lunch, and most of us did some serious shopping. We bought mostly creams and mud from the Dead Sea to bring back home.

The Dead Sea was quite an experience. We took our bathing suits, and water shoes, so we could take a bath in the muddy waters. Honestly, it looked like a muddy swamp. We were wondering why bathe in that dirty water when we have beautiful beaches back in Miami. But we had come too far not to go through the experience. We went in, very carefully because we had been warned there was a hole. First, Maria felt down. Then Christy, upon seeing what happened to Maria, stepped once, stepped twice, and landed on her butt. In the meantime, Rafael was being swallowed by the swamp. The only one that managed it beautifully was Paul. After we managed to get back on our feet, we actually enjoyed ourselves. We joined the rest of the group who were busy covering themselves with mud. We did the same. We spread mud all over our bodies and faces. We floated in the over-salted water. It was definitely a different experience. Rafael claims these people have sold us the Kool Aid, and are making us go into the mud to bathe as if it’s the best thing in the planet. He says the Israelites are great salespeople. They sell us the land as “holy” and the mud from the Dead Sea as having “revival” properties for dead skin cells.



When the salty water touched our lips, it was pretty painful. One of the guys in our group got water into his eyes, and it was bad. We were only able to stay inside the water for fifteen minutes because the high level of salt would be harmful if we stayed longer. Who would want to stay in that muddy water longer than 15 minutes anyway? True, it has minerals that are supposed to be good. It did leave our skin feeling pretty soft. But at the end of the day, it’s still mud. However, we bought the Kool Aid, and bought bags of mud. Hopefully it will make all our wrinkles disappear.


The Dead Sea is the lowest point on the surface of the earth—1,300 feet below sea level. Its salt content approaches 33 percent (nearly nine times that of the ocean). Water arrives in the basin primarily via the Jordan River. But upriver demands have curtailed inbound flow to less than 5 percent of what it was in Bible times, resulting in a rapidly dropping lake level and the formation of sinkholes that we saw adjacent to the road. There is no natural outlet for the water that enters, so the only way for the water to leave is through evaporation. There is plenty of that, particularly on a summer day when daytime high temperatures exceed 100° F. On such a day, half an inch of water leaves the lake. The people that come to the Dead Sea come for the therapeutic value of the water and cosmetic value of the mud. And who can refuse “swimming” in a body of water that does not allow you to sink? Honestly, most of us would probably rather sink in the clear blue waters of Miami Beach.

After the Dead Sea, we were all pretty exhausted. We returned to the hotel, where we had mass. This time, Father Willie left the homily to us. He asked us to share what this pilgrimage has meant for us. Many pilgrims shared.

After mass, we went to dinner to Chakra. We saved the best for last because this was the best food we’ve eaten in the Holy Land. Some of the choices were sea bass, focaccia bread with tomatoes, beef carpaccio with Parmesan shavings, burrata with tomatoes, and for dessert we shared a crack (oatmeal cake), which was awesome and pistachio ice cream which was not green and tasted creamy and yummy. It was truly one delicious meal.

Thursday, April 5, 2018

Our Pilgrimage into the Holy Land-Day 8

Thursday, April 5, 2018: Temple Mount-Ein Kerem

“In those days Mary set out and went with haste to a Judean town in the hill country, where she entered the house of Zechariah and greeted Elizabeth. When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the child leaped in her womb. And Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit and exclaimed with a loud cry, “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb.” Luke 1:39-42


We began our day on the bus with a prayer, and the scripture reading from John 17. In this chapter, Jesus prays to the Father for His disciples. “Righteous Father, the world does not know you, but I know you; and these know that you have sent me. I made your name known to them, and I will make it known, so that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in them.” John 17:25-26

Our first visit today was to the Temple Mount, which is basically the platform on which the Jewish temple resided until it was destroyed in 70 AD. Today, it is home to the Dome of the Rock, the third-holiest place in Islam. Ever since the Six-Day War of 1967, when the Old City of Jerusalem became part of the modern state of Israel, control of the platform has remained with the Muslims. Our awesome tour guides, Shuki and Ana, prepared us for the high security procedures that we would need to go through in order to visit the Temple Mount.


They explained to us that there were eight different entrances to the Temple Mount, but non-Muslims could only enter through one of them. The other seven entrances did not have a lot of security, but we would need to pass through a metal detector. We also had to take our passports, and be ready for questions. Shuki also told us that once inside, we would split into two groups so as not to call too much attention on ourselves because we were such a large group. He also said that if we took pictures, it would be best if we did not touch. Yes, we could not touch because for Muslims, a man and a woman touching in public would be considered disrespectful. We had to dress very modestly (no shorts, no tight pants, no skirts above the ankles, no exposed shoulders...). We also could not wear crosses or carry any religious articles, like our Bibles. And, we could not pray while we were there. Muslims obviously do not believe in freedom of religion. 


Once inside, we saw a group of Orthodox Jews. They were being followed by police officers. Shuki explained that the reason why they were being followed was to make sure that they did not start praying in there. If they did, they would be immediately arrested. Wow.

After we tuned out all the Muslim rules and regulations, we were able to actually enjoy the place we were at. The most striking building on the platform is the Dome of the Rock, one of the most iconic symbols of Jerusalem. Its golden dome, composed of gold electroplated on copper, has a warm, natural glow at dawn and dusk. Muslims erected the first building on this site in 691 AD because they believed it marked the stone from which Mohammad rose on his night journey to heaven. For Jews and Christians, this building marks the summit of Mount Moriah, where Abraham was supposed to sacrifice Isaac. This was also the location of the temple that Jesus frequented, the temple where He overturned the tables because they were turning His Father’s house into a den of robbers (Matthew 21:12-17). Unfortunately, nothing of this temple remains in view. The Romans destroyed it in 70 AD.


We were not able to enter the mosque because only Muslims are allowed to enter. But we were able to walk around, take pictures, and we decided that if we could not beat them, we would join them.


After our interesting visit to the Temple Mount, we headed towards the Western or Wailing Wall. The Western Wall (known in Hebrew simply as HaKotel, “the wall”) is the most sacred spot on earth for the observant Jewish community. When the Romans destroyed the temple in 70 AD, they destroyed everything on the plaza but did not destroy this retaining wall. Consequently, the wall is the one element of the first-century temple complex that remains. Given the legacy of these stones and their proximity to the temple (which was located where the Dome of the Rock now stands), Orthodox Jews come to worship and pray here. Even though this was merely the retaining wall holding up the platform on which the temple sat, they believe the divine presence never left this wall. That is why they come to worship here.


When we visited, the wall was packed with praying Jews. The women had to go to the right, and the men to the left. The space for the men was much wider than the space for the women. It was very interesting to see everyone praying with their prayer books. Some were sitting down, but many were in front of the wall bouncing back and forth. It was very difficult to reach the actual wall. Some of us had been carrying little pieces of paper filled with prayer requests, and we were not going to leave without placing those papers somewhere in that wall. We finally located a section in the wall where we would be able to place them, but getting to it proved rather difficult because there were Jewish ladies standing in front of the wall praying, and with no intentions of moving. Some of us had to literally get on our knees and crawl under the praying ladies, to place the prayer requests inside the holes on the wall, which were already packed with little pieces of paper. But we accomplished our mission.


After such a special and moving morning, we got on the bus and headed towards Ein Kerem. While on the bus, I began to reflect on the whole experience. I thought to myself, “This is such nonsense. What’s the point of having to place the prayer requests on the wall? I could just have prayed directly to God and avoided all the trouble of reaching the wall, finding the perfect spot, getting on my knees, and placing the paper in a hole that was already overflowing with papers.” And then, I looked out the window, and what do I see?


Butterflies have always had special meaning for me. The piece of paper that I buried on the wall was filled with butterflies. Every time I’m feeling down or having doubts, God sends me a butterfly. It’s His way to reassure me that He is listening, and that He is present. So as soon as I saw the huge butterfly on the garden, I felt God telling me: “Yes, it’s true that you didn’t have to go through all the trouble of placing the little piece of paper on the wall. I listen to you regardless. But did you see my people? Did you see their faith? When you were crawling on your knees trying to reach the wall, I was there.” I have no doubt that the Lord was present in that wall “for where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them” Matthew 18:20. Since I have returned home, He has answered one special prayer request written in that piece of paper, a request that I have been praying for a very long time. Thank You, Jesus!!!

We stopped to have lunch in a Kibbutz, which is a communal place where everyone shares everything and nobody owns anything. The Kibbutz operates under the premise that all income generated by the Kibbutz and its members goes into a common pool. This income is used to run the Kibbutz, and to provide for the needs of its members. The food was buffet style but pretty good, especially the desserts.

Back in the bus, we continued meditating on John 17. “I ask not only on behalf of these, but also on behalf of those who will believe in me through their word, that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us,so that the world may believe that you have sent me. The glory that you have given me I have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me. Father, I desire that those also, whom you have given me, may be with me where I am, to see my glory, which you have given me because you loved me before the foundation of the world.” John 17:20-24

Father Frank then gave us a meditation. We may be different. We may worship in a different way. But we have a choice. If we concentrate on our differences, we will continue to struggle and fight with each other, thus widening the barriers that keep us apart. Instead, even as we struggle to understand the different religions, we can choose to come together as a community embracing each other. May we concentrate on what unites us, which is God. May we be united in God’s love. And may we bring this unity back home to our community, which is also made up of many different religions and nationalities.

With these thoughts in our minds, we arrived to Ein Kerem, the town where John the Baptist was born. Our first stop was the home of Zechariah and Elizabeth, the parents of John the Baptist. The Church of John the Baptist was built in this location in the nineteenth-century, surrounding the cave believed to be the birthplace of John the Baptist.


Before we entered the church, we stood in the courtyard outside which turned out to be a wonderful spot to read the story of John the Baptist’s birth (Luke 1:57–66). All around the courtyard they have the Benedictus prayer, which is Zechariah’s song of celebration, in all the languages. We stood by the English version, and we read it together.


To stand in the very place where all this took place was very special. The first part of the prayer, found in Luke 1:68-75, is not about John, it’s about Jesus. How amazing that the first words uttered out of Zechariah’s mouth after he had been mute for nine months, were not about the baby boy that he had just fathered, instead, they were about Jesus. He praised God first, and then, he mentions his own child (Luke 1:76-79). We can learn a lot from Zechariah. God has to come first in our lives, above our own children, above our spouses, above our parents, above our jobs... If we place God at the top, He will take care of everything else.


After visiting the beautiful John the Baptist Church, we began a very steep climb up a hill with over 200 steps to reach the Church of the Visitation. We prayed the rosary as we were going up. We were very impressed with some of the members from our group who are “slightly” older than us, and yet, they took the climb and didn’t even complaint. Some had to stay behind at a restaurant, but from the stories they shared, they had a great time. The rest of us, celebrated mass at the Church of the Visitation, which was absolutely gorgeous. The façade of this twentieth-century church is adorned by a mosaic that recalls the visit Mary made to her cousin Elizabeth after she had received the news that she would be the mother of Jesus.


On the courtyard, there is also a beautiful statue of Mary and Elizabeth talking to each other.




And the song of joy, known as the Magnificat (Luke 1: 46–55), that came to Mary’s lips during her visit is engraved in various languages around the courtyard. The Magnificat is regarded as one of the most powerful pieces of inspired poetry in the Bible, and it reminds us of how God uses the most ordinary of people from the most ordinary places to accomplish extraordinary things.


The main scripture for our mass was, of course, the reading of the Visitation from Luke 1:39-44. Father Willie’s homily, as usual, was right on point. He shared the story of a time when he went to visit two students in New York who were considering the priesthood. He had only been a priest for a few years, and he wanted to make sure that “girls” would not steal his two prospective future priests.

He asked his superiors if he could make the trip. They decided it was for a good cause, so they gave him permission and a budget, and with that, he took off to New York. He had enough money to invite the two students to dinner, so he took them to an Italian restaurant. While they were there, they saw some Marines that were in the restaurant. The boys told him, “Father Willie, wouldn’t it be great if we paid the bill for the Marines?” He looked at them, and felt embarrassed to tell them that he was on a tight budget, so instead he said: “Sure, that would be very nice.” He called the waitress over and told her that they would cover the cost of the meal for the Marines.


When the Marines finished eating, they approached their table and they told Father Willie: “The waitress told us that you were paying our bill, and we wanted to thank you.” They also asked him if he could pray for them because the next day they were shipping out to Iraq, and this was their last meal before they left. Father Willie told them that he would surely pray for them.

The boys were ecstatic about what they had done, and so was Father Willie until he got the bill. When he looked at it, the bill was $527. He could not believe his eyes. He called the waitress over and told her that there had to be a mistake. The waitress told him there was no mistake. The Marines had eaten and drank a lot, and in addition, they had taken pizza to go. Father Willie got really upset. He felt like he had been taken advantage of. He didn’t say anything to the boys, but he was very worried about what his superiors would tell him back home when they found out how much he had gone over budget.

As they were walking back from the restaurant, the boys kept talking about what a great deed they had done for the Marines. It got to the point that Father Willie couldn’t take it anymore, and he told the boys: “Those Marines took me for a ride. Do you know how much was their bill? Five hundred and twenty-seven dollars!!!” The boys looked at him with a surprised look on their faces, and then, in typical Belen fashion, they started to laugh. Once they calmed down from their laughter, they told him: “But Father Willie, you have always told us that when we give, the Lord recompenses us with so much more. Surely, He will pay you back.” Father Willie looked at them, and said: “You idiots, of course He is not going to pay me back. It doesn’t work like that.”

He returned to Miami on Sunday night, trying to figure out how best to approach his superior to tell him that he had overspent on the trip. On Monday morning, he was at his office when the school secretary calls him that there was a man there to see him. The man told him that he was very thankful to him for everything that he was doing, and he wanted to give him a gift so that he could use it in the best way that he needed it. Father Willie said “thank you,” and when he opened the envelope, there was a check inside for $1,000. He was in shock. He went back to his office, and he called one of the boys in New York. He said: “You won’t believe what just happened. I just got a check out of the blue for $1,000.” Silence on the line. He asked the boy: “Are you there?”

“Yes, Father Willie, I’m here.”

“You are just as surprised as I am, aren’t you.”

“Father Willie, I’m not surprised that God paid you back. I’m just in shock that he repaid you so fast.”

Father Willie tied this story to Mama Mary and service. Mama Mary was all about service. She found out that she would become the mother of the Son of God, and that her cousin Elizabeth was also expecting at the same time. And what did she do? She took off “with haste” to her cousin’s side. She did not think about herself first. She was pregnant, and she took off from Nazareth to Ein Kerem, which now we know they are very far from one another. Just to put it into perspective, imagine going from Miami to West Palm Beach in a donkey. And pregnant!!! If we admired Mama Mary before we came to Israel, now we must put her on a pedestal. She is simply amazing!!!

Father Willie recommended a book to us: “Man’s search for meaning” by Victor Frankl. In the book, it talks about the fact that the people that survived the holocaust camps were those that put the needs of others ahead of their own. Father Willie also told us that whatever our profession is (attorneys, doctors, dentists, psychiatrists, accountants, engineers...), if we work just for the money, we are never going to be happy. But if our main goal is to serve others, we will find true happiness. “El que no vive para servir no sirve para vivir.”--Pope Francis

He also did a comparison between King David and John the Baptist. David leaped and dance with joy when he was in front of the ark of the covenant, just like John did when he heard Mary’s voice. Mary is the new ark of the covenant. In the Church of the Visitation, there is a beautiful painting at the back of the church where Mary is standing on the moon with baby Jesus in her hands. The moon reflects the light of the sun. Mary shined bright because she reflected the light of her Son. “Never be afraid of loving the Blessed Virgin too much. You can never love her more than Jesus did.”--Saint Maximilian Kolbe


Mary will always lead us to her Son.

Some of us were confused as to why the Visitation took place at the top of the hill, and not at the bottom where Elizabeth and Zechariah lived. Underneath the church, there is a little chapel. Inside the little chapel, there is a well.


Father Willie explained that it is believed that the Visitation took place at the top of the hill, because Elizabeth would go to the well everyday to get water. It is believed that when Mary arrived and asked for Elizabeth, they told her that she was at the well. So Mary took off to the top of the hill, met her cousin by the well, and that’s where she sang the Magnificat. We were speechless to be at the place where these two incredible and amazing women had stood 2,000 years ago. Climbing those 200 steps to get to the top was not an easy feat, and Elizabeth did it every day to get water, and she was pregnant. God help us if we ever complain over menial things.

On the way down from the hill, some of us stopped to shop, and others to eat delicious gelato at an ice cream shop. We then got on the bus and returned to Jerusalem.

At night, we went out to dinner to a restaurant called the Dolphin Yam which was delicious. Between the four of us, we shared a tray of seafood that was pretty spectacular.