welcome to
the Church of Holy sepulchre
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre claims to be located in the exact location of Jesus’ crucifixion, burial and resurrection. It was built in 335 CE by Helena, mother of the Roman emperor Constantine. She went to the Jerusalem for the purpose of identifying these locations and claimed she found them. Then she built the church on this site.
The church is now under six caretakers: Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox, Coptic, Syrian Orthodox, and the Ethiopian Orthodox.
* Photo was contributed by Dr. Rasmussen.
Entrance of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
There are two arched doors in the entrance. The right-hand side was blocked by Muslim reconquest of the city in 1187. Tourists can enter through the left-hand side door. Also on the right hand-side of this photo, you can see a flight of stairs, it is called a Chapel of the Franks. Some says that this is an ancient entrance of the hill of Golgotha. This chapel commemorates the stripping off of Jesus’ clothes by Roman Soldiers.
the stripping off of Jesus’ clothes by Roman Soldiers
stone of Anointing
The Burial of Jesus
structure Inside the church
This church’s structures were destroyed several times: Fires in 614 CE, 938 CE, and 1808 CE; earthquakes in 746 CE and 910 CE; fire by Muslim invasion in 966 CE; destruction by Muslims in 1010 CE. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre has been rebuilt on numerous occasions in the past.
the art of the church
Tourists can see beautiful structures, paintings, marbles, mosaics, and domes in the church.
Stairs to calvary
The Crucifixion of Jesus
Rock cracked by earthquake
Chapel of the Crucifixion is marked by an Eastern Orthodox chapel. Through the glass on the ground, we can see the rock of Golgotha. In between there is a crack. Geologists say an earthquake may have struck Judea around April 3 in the year 33 based on an analysis of seismic records (NBCNews archive on 5/24/2012). The Gospel also mentioned about the earthquake when Jesus breathed His last (Matt 27:51).
The Death of Jesus
1st century ancient tomb
This ancient tomb is located around the Syrian Chapel. Dr. Carl Rasmussen has said:” The tradition is that Joseph of Arimathea was buried here, after he had given his original tomb for Jesus to be buried in.”
outside look of the tomb
This empty tomb reminds us that Jesus was dead, buried, and resurrected.
The Resurrection of Jesus
John 20:1-10
jesus' tomb
Some say that this was Jesus’ tomb inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It sits beneath the central dome of the church. Visitors need to line up and stoop to enter the six feet long x six feet wide tomb. Only 3-4 visitors are allowed at a time. Since photographs are prohibited inside the tomb, I only took the outside structure of the photo.
mosaics
Visitors can see beautiful mosaics on the ground or even on the walls in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
closing Ceremony
Closing the door of the church at night is a “must see” program. An interesting fact is that the key to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre has been kept by an Arab family since the seventh century CE. And a second Arab family has been in charge of opening and closing the door each day. Because the church building is shared by six Christian denominations, things go more smoothly when these neutral Arab families are in charge of the keys.