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The Church of the Nativity
is the cradle of Christianity and one of the earliest Christian
structures. The original Basilica, erected in the 4th century by
St. Helena in 334 and completely destroyed in the Samaritan Revolt of AD
529, was replaced during the reign of Justinian (527-65) on the same
site, by a larger Basilica, slightly different in plan and incorporating
different parts of the original building. The Basilica was built in the
shape of a cross with a trilateral apse.
Enter the
Nativity Church through
The Door of
Humility
The main access to the Basilica is
by the very small Door of Humility. Visitors must enter bending over, as
if to a real cave. Originally the church had three entrances, two of
which have been walled up. The present small entrance was made during
the Ottoman era to prevent mounted horsemen from entering the Basilica.
The interior of the church is
impressive chiefly because of its simplicity. It contains four rows of
monolithic columns of Corinthian order carved from local stone. The
columns were painted during the Middle Ages with frescoes of the
Apostles. Originally, all the inner walls of the church were covered
with mosaics. The remaining mosaics on the side walls and floor attest
to the former splendor of the sanctuary. The mosaic floors were covered
up with two feet of imported soil, and a pavement of marble slabs was
laid at a higher level by the Greeks in 1842. Since the pre-Crusader
times the roof has been of cedar wood with the rafters exposed.
Evidence of the
turbulent history of the church can be readily seen in the
fabric of the building; for centuries it was one of the most fought-over
of the Holy Places. It was only by chance that this building escaped
destruction during the Persian invasion of AD 614. It was the only major
church in the country to be spared. The Persians were surprised to
discover a representation of the Magi from Persia on a facade decorated
with a colorful mosaic. So out of reverence and respect for their
ancestors, they decided to honor these sages by sparing the church.
Later, the building was seized and defended by a succession of Muslim
and Crusader armies; this explains the fortress-like appearance of its
exterior. In the course of time, the complex was expanded by the
addition of several chapels and monasteries. Today the Basilica is
overshadowed by the Franciscan convent in the north, the Greek Orthodox
convent in the southeast and the Armenian convent in the southwest.
Also, recent buildings rendered the famous monument quite invisible for
lack of a spot from which it can be easily viewed.
The present ceiling is from the 14th
century, and it was restored in 1842. The two side arms end in a
semicircular apse similar to that of the center. In front of the central
apse, stands the Iconostasis which was erected by the Greeks in the 17th
century. The southern apse opens onto the courtyard of the Greek
Orthodox convent. The steps of this courtyard lead down into a series of
burial grottoes extending under the southern aisles.
The part of the Church of the
Nativity with the greatest religious and historical significance remains
the Grotto of Nativity, the traditional site of Jesus' birth. In the
church, two flights of stairs now lead to the Grotto. An altar was
erected over the birthplace, and a fourteen-pointed silver star was
embedded in the white marble to
mark the birth place of Jesus. It
is lit by fifteen silver lamps representing the different Christian
communities. Opposite the altar of the Nativity, three steps lead the
visitor to the Altar of the Manger, the place where the Baby Jesus was
laid after he was born. A third altar has been erected opposite the
Manger. It is dedicated to the Wise Men who came from the East to
Bethlehem under the guidance of a star. The grotto is decorated with
numerous lamps, figures of saints, embroidery, and a variety of sacred
ornaments.
The present Franciscan church of
St. Catherine of Alexandria is entirely modern. It was built by the
Franciscans in 1881 to replace the old chapel of the Augustinian Canons
on the north side of the church, which was probably an adoption of the
original chapel belonging to St. Paula's convent. Little remained of
this chapel when the Crusaders arrived in 1099; therefore, they built a
cloister and monastery which was given to the Canons of St. Augustine
and which became in 1347 a Franciscan convent. The fame of this church
rests on the solemn Roman Catholic midnight mass celebrated there on
Christmas Eve and broadcast live by satellite to TV networks all over
the world.
In the center of the cloister,
stands a pillar crowned by a capital of white stone with the sculptured
figure of St. Jerome. St. Jerome came in AD 384 with a group of pilgrims
to settle in Bethlehem and founded a western monastic tradition which
has endured with interruptions, till this day. Here, in a cave under the
Church of the Nativity, St. Jerome produced his great literary works
among them is his Latin Translation of the Old Testament now known as
the Vulgate.
“Glory to God in the Highest
Heaven and on Earth Peace for Those He Favors.”
Luke 2,14
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