Israeli Archeologists Discover “Jesus’ Synagogue”

Archeological Dig at Magdala, Israel (Photo: Courtesy of Magdala Center)

Archeological Dig at Magdala, Israel (Photo: Courtesy of Magdala Center)

In the time of Jesus, Magdala was a thriving fishing village. It was home to Mary Magdalene – she was “Mary of Magdala.” And it was located in the small area along the sea of Galilee where the bible said Jesus lived and ministered and performed most of his miracles.

One of the most amazing discoveries here is a synagogue, one of only seven ever found from the time of Jesus.

“This stone is really unique, we’ve never excavated anything like it,” said Dina Gorni, one of two architects from the Israeli Antiquities Authority who excavated the site.

Archaeologist Dina Gorni at Magdala (Photo: Irris Makler)

Archaeologist Dina Gorni at Magdala (Photo: Irris Makler)

“It took me 3 days to believe what I am seeing that we are standing in a synagogue from the time that the Beit Hamikdash, the Temple in Jerusalem was working,” she said.

All this was a mere twenty inches beneath the topsoil. Incredibly, no other towns had been built over it in the centuries since. And no one had disturbed it. It was waiting, like Pompeii, to be discovered.

Father Juan Maria Solana Is Director of Jerusalem’s Pontifical Institute. He said, “To be frank, I felt something about this place and this project, that it was impossible to explain.”

He explained that his dream when he arrived in Jerusalem seven years ago was to build a church and hotel for pilgrims in the Galilee. After four years gathering donations Father Solana had enough to buy the land. And the dig began.

The new testament does not specify that Jesus ministered in Magdala, but Father Solana said the discovery of this synagogue means what we thought we knew will have to be re-examined.

“From the Jewish point of view, the position is clear. It’s a first century synagogue, beautifully decorated, with pieces of art and an altar such has never been found in any other synagogue from that time,” Solana said. “Never, ever. From the Christian point of view, we cannot doubt that Jesus would have been there sometime. The first Christian communities used to gather in the synagogues. They were observant Jews. So it’s clear that the first generation of Christians used to gather there.”

And that, he said, could mean he and his workmen found the first Church on earth.

Father Juan Maria Solana (Photo: Courtesy of Magdala Center)

Father Juan Maria Solana (Photo: Courtesy of Magdala Center)

The two archaeologists working on the site, Arfan Najjar and Dina Gorni – one Muslim and the other Jewish – give cautious support to this theory.

They point out that the synagogue was located on the outskirts of Magdala. And it was built for a congregation of around 120, not the thousands who lived there; for people, in other words, who marked themselves off from the rest of Jewish Magdala.

Tramping around the site on a sunny winter’s afternoon, the Sea of Galilee shimmering a few feet away, Gorni is still in awe of what they’ve found here, and its importance for both Christians and Jews.

“You can hear about or read about it, but to see it, it’s only here. The story about Jesus and Mary Magdalene, the synagogue, the altar stone, it’s so important to both religions, I think to the world,” she said. ”It was there for 2,000 years and it was waiting for us, for this generation, to see it, to come and touch it and to come and to pray here again.”

When this dig is finished, Father Solana intends to preserve the ruins in an open air museum. He said finding what may be the site of Jesus’ first ministry could be a real blessing for his church and hotel being built nearby.

 Mosaic Found at Magdala (Photo: Irris Makler)

Mosaic Found at Magdala (Photo: Irris Makler)

St Mary Magdalene by Pietro Perugino (Photo: Palazzo Pitti, Florence)

St Mary Magdalene by Pietro Perugino (Photo: Palazzo Pitti, Florence)


Discussion

7 comments for “Israeli Archeologists Discover “Jesus’ Synagogue””

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003523722190 Jeffry Harland

    I’m always disturbed by the leaps to certainty of religious people such as Father Solana. It’s a long way to go from this being a synagogue dating from the time of Jesus ministry to being “certain” that he’s discovered the first Christian church. And if Christians did meet there, so what? They met in a lot of places, most notably peoples homes. If this is, in fact, a synagogue dating from that time it is undoubtedly more Jewish than Christian.

    • http://www.facebook.com/danny.ray.507 Danny Ray

      Jeffry, You sound just as certain as Father Solana, but with a bad attitude.

    • Gary Walmsley

      I agree with Mr. Harland, Father Solana had contorted the mere possibility that ‘historical’ Jesus might have visited Magdala to some how that he DEFINITELY was at Magdala, and therefore HAD to have been at the synagogue, borders on a blatant attempt to inflate the discovery (as significant as it is to Jewish history) into some kind of prima facie Christian holy place, simply because of a vague proximity and because the Father claims he had some ‘feeling’ of the specialnees of the place. It seems very opportunistic and more than a little manipulative.

      I’m sure Mr. Ray, you find that I also am guilty of ‘a bad attitude’. And I can very comfortably live with that.

      • Henry Stadhouders

        I suspect that the pious, yet shrewd priest is cherishing the vision of huge flocks of silly pilgrims dwarfing those Jesus would have attracted setting out to visit the place in order to enjoy their share of the same illusions as he is professing to have experienced there. Imagine the touristic potential of the now ignominious place!
        I would not be surprised, when Jesus’ very own footprints were to be exposed as the dig proceeds, only to add the latest instance to the long record of pia fraus.

  • http://www.facebook.com/melanie.moon.35 Melanie Moon

    Among other things, “Charity (love) ……believeth all things, hopeth all things…for we know in part, and we prophesy in part. But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away….For now we see through a glass, darkly but then face to face: now I know in part, but then shall I know even as also I am known. And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity. I Corinthians 13:4-13   I believe

  • CatmanbytheBay

    Though Jesus’ ties to Galilee strongly suggest that he and his followers at least visited the synagogue, Mary Magdalene’s ties to Magdala in Galilee are more tenuous.  There is also a “Magdala” in Ethiopia, and that there are suggestions in the gospels that she was a foreigner, rather than a native Galilean — and a reference in one of the Gnostic Gospels to her being “dark.”
     
    There are other questions regaring Christian assumptions about places mentioned in the New Testament.  One is Jesus’ birthplace being modern Bethlehem, rather than a former village of the same name (“Beit Lehem,” in Arabic) in Galilee, and only a few miles from Nazareth — making it a far more likely place for Joseph to have gone for the census.  Some scholars also argue that there is no record of Rome ever having ordered its subjects to answer a census at their place of birth at all, as this would have caused both logistical and administrative nightmares.
     
    Another is Jesus himself even being from Nazareth, when there is no record outside the Bible of any such town having existed before the 3rd century — the argument here being that “Nazarene” is more likely a corruption of “Nazorean,” which was one of the early Jesus sects, and most likely the original one.   

  • http://www.facebook.com/nicholas.galanti Nicholas Galanti

    Father Juan Maria Solana is right,  but for all the wrong reasons. as this dig shows, the team keeps moving stones key stones around. i just hope they kepr accurate records as to their original position,  if not, much of the history they had no clue of,  will be lost for ever. also,  why did Israel assign Mexicans to excavate the one of the most important sites in many years? Sad,,  very sad.