| Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
There is a place in Orlando, Florida, near
Disneyland, called the Holy
Land Experience in which they recreate the times of Jesus, literally
dropping you into the customs of His time on earth. Do you think this might
actually be a helpful way to spread the Gospel?
Yours sincerely,
Archie O’Logist,

Dear Archie,
I have actually been to this “Disney
Land of the Soul.” It was interesting, but it didn’t have much to do
with the actual time and place of Jesus’ own life. It was a lot of southern
evangelicals, both blond haired Caucasians and dark African Americans dressed
up in Arab looking outfits doing musical numbers. They are very nice people.
It was sort of “Shalom Aleichem, y'all.” It was fun. There was a kind
of Disney-esque ancient village, and a little zoo of animals that were
supposed to be typical of the period, a sad looking donkey, a goat and
a few chickens, if I recall properly, and some animals in cages. There
was a model of the central shrine of the temple that was perhaps one fifth
size of the real thing. It doubled as a stage for a brief passion play
with singing. Inside the mini-Holy of Holies was a movie theater. The niftiest
thing there, to my taste, was a recreation of the tent of meeting in the
Wilderness, which housed the Ark of the Covenant during the wandering of
the Israelites. It showed the priestly ritual that I found interesting.
There were gift shops and a cafeteria where one could get a decent falafel.
It was great fun and had nothing to do with the actual life and times of
Jesus.
There is however, a place one can go to
get a real feel for what things were like at the time of Jesus. It is called
the Holy Land. I mean the real Holy Land. It is not cheap to get there
and you really need a tour, at least the first time you go. (I heartily
recommend Steve and Janet Ray; arduous, a real pilgrimage, but really good.)
People are worried that it isn’t safe. It’s very safe, much safer,
for instance than a bus ride in Chicago.
The real experience of the real Holy Land
is readily available in modern times: constant tension between ethnic groups,
poverty and wealth side by side, religiosity so intense that it evokes
hatred instead of love, secularism and religious fanaticism side by side,
and at war with each other. In short, it is almost exactly the same as
when Jesus left his heavenly throne and was made flesh in the Virgin’s
womb. It is dry, and hot, and dusty. The sea of Galilee is blue and calm
one moment and then swept by ten foot waves the next. There is a little
group of people who live there that very few know about. They are the Palestinian
Christians. They make up only one or two percent of the population and
hang on only by a thread. They are probably the descendants of everyone
who ever lived in the land; the Canaanite, the Hebrews, the first Christians,
the Greeks, the Arabs, the Crusaders. They are the people of the land and
they have always been there. Jesus, I suspect, was one of them. They venerate
the Holy Places whose locations they have never forgotten. They are among
the nicest people I have ever met. They have resisted the intense Muslim
pressure to abandon Christ, but for more than a thousand years they have
quietly resisted and remained faithful to their Lord, who is also their
kin. Now they face increasing pressure from the Israelis who hem them in
with walls and regulations, hoping that they will just go away. Many of
them are leaving
and moving to places like Detroit and Skokie, Illinois, a charming
little suburb near Chicago.
There was another time that Christians
had to flee the Holy Land. It was about 65 AD. The Lord Jesus had warned
them to flee, and, according to Eusebius of Caesarea, an ancient Christian
author, the prophets among the first Christians warned the whole community
that the times predicted by the Lord were about to arrive. They fled to
Damascus and to Pella across the Jordan among other places, and the Romans
swept in and destroyed the Land. When it was all over, they quietly returned
and resumed their lives of work and prayer, faithful to their Lord.
When the Persians invaded, when the Romans
invaded, when the Muslims invaded, when the British and the modern Israelis
invaded they endured and continued their faithful guardianship of the Holy
Places. These People of the Land are the real “Holy Land Experience.”
It is this difficult land, as stormy as
the Sea of Galilee when the Syrian wind blow downs the mountain passes
that “God so loved.” He did not love the polished, varnished, tidy
version of the faith that we wish were true. He loved the poor, the sinful,
the sick, the difficult. He loved humanity. He loves you with all your
sins and so He was made flesh their in that center of the human storm,
a land that has never really known peace. “My peace I give you... not
as the world gives peace.” Now there is a new storm brewing. Keep the
Christians of the Holy Land in your prayers. Do what you can to help them.
They are the true Holy Land Experience.
Yours as ever,
Rev. Know-It-All

The
Question Was
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Have you heard
of The Holy Land Experience? |
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