“Hidden Treasures Unearthed: Is This the Long-Lost ‘Church of the Apostles’ That Could Rewrite Early Christianity?”

"Hidden Treasures Unearthed: Is This the Long-Lost 'Church of the Apostles' That Could Rewrite Early Christianity?"

What if I told you that beneath the sun-drenched shores of the Sea of Galilee, a centuries-old mystery might finally be unraveling? Hidden away for nearly 1,500 years, the fabled Church of the Apostles—a structure thought by some to be as elusive as Bigfoot himself—could just be a recent discovery away from its resurrection! Archaeologists from the Kinneret Institute for Galilean Archaeology and Nyack College are stirring up excitement, carefully digging through a site called el-Araj, allegedly the ancient village of Bethsaida, where Jesus performed remarkable miracles. From healing a blind man to feeding 5,000 hungry souls with merely five loaves and two fish, the tales surrounding this site are both electrifying and profound. So, could this be the ultimate archaeological treasure map, finally pinpointing the exact locale of Jesus’ first disciples, Peter and Andrew? Buckle up, because the journey into history is about to heat up! LEARN MORE.

The Church of the Apostles, built atop the home of Jesus’ first disciples, was believed by many to be merely a myth. But these researchers think they’ve finally found it after centuries.

Church Of The Apostles

Zachary WongThe Beit Habek excavations in have uncovered a Byzantine-era church believed to have been built over the home of Jesus’ earliest disciples, Peter and Andrew.

Archaeologists digging along the northern shore of the Sea of Galilee believe they’ve found the storied Church of the Apostles, supposedly built atop the former home of two of Jesus’ earliest disciples, Peter and Andrew.

According to Fox News, a joint research team from the Kinneret Institute for Galilean Archaeology in Israel and Nyack College in New York uncovered the 1,500-year-old church at a site called el-Araj, believed to be the location of the ancient Jewish fishing village of Bethsaida. It’s there that Jesus was said to have healed a blind man and fed 5,000 people with five loaves of bread and two fish before the area became the Roman city of Julias.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5

RSS
Follow by Email