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In the photo, Antonio Barluzzi's Church of the Visitation.
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(For ABC Wednesday.)
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Pictures of life in Jerusalem and the Jerusalem Hills. And since August 2013 also a look at the northern Negev, my new home.
The festive Mass for the Feast of the Transfiguration was broadcast live as streaming video.
Father Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Custodian of the Holy Land, and many other priests conducted Mass in the upper part of the church.
Cameras of the Franciscan Media Center were grinding away (including one on a huge long boom).
The view of the Jezreel Valley from the top of Mt. Tabor, the lone rounded mountain in the region, was splendid.
This particular monastery does not have a problem with pigeons; in fact they raise pigeons.
Hogla is the Hebrew word for partridge, and St. Gerasimus Monastery has many cute ones like this in the photo.
The very old monastery is in the desert near Jericho.
Greek Orthodox Archimandrite Chrysostomos has been abbot of the monastery for some 30 years.
But why a full sized lion in the courtyard (and a lion on many of the icons)?
Shhhh, we are descending to the dark crypt beneath the Armenian Catholic church in the Old City.
OK, no talking; the mysteries of faith seldom have an explanation anyway . . . .
Thanks to Shadow Shot Sunday I am starting to appreciate some shadows more than the "real" thing.
Psalm 32
5 I acknowledged my sin to thee, and I did not hide my iniquity; I said, "I will confess my transgressions to the LORD"; then thou didst forgive the guilt of my sin. [Selah] 
A rare photo of the gate open. ( A car had just driven out and the automatic gate was sliding shut.)
Let's let Aviva Bar-Am tell the story:"You may find Mea She'arim a strange location for an Orthodox Patriarchate. However, by 1927 when the Romanian Church was anxious to gain a foothold in Jerusalem, the choicest sites inside the Old City walls had already been taken.
Instead, it bought property on Rehov Shivtei Yisrael, which was close to the Old City and nearly empty; only later did the street fill up with haredim.
Stand back to look at the reddish tint of the Patriarchate's beautiful stone structure and to note its stately lines. The entrance to the church is hidden around the corner behind the gas station, a gesture to the area's religious residents."
Haredim refers to ultra-Orthodox Jews.
Floor tiles are reflected by the special glass protecting the sides of this ancient stone structure.
Two tiers, up to the ceiling, of paintings, winding all around the sanctuary and then some!
The Alexander Nevsky church was built in 1896 over important archaeological discoveries found in 1858, including what is believed to be the Judgment Gate.