The Cenacle Why This Upper Room in Jerusalem is Central to Christianity
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=q0F5BdaBJ3g
Information about the Last Supper Room (Cenacle, Upper Room) itself will be provided after this announcement (Daniel A Nunes). • Unfortunately, I have not been able to work as a tour guide because of the war. • Should you wish to support me and my videos please subscribe to my channel and let me guide you through the Holy Land via my videos. In this way, I will be able to continue to do my work of uploading to YouTube. Upon your request and in return I am very much happy to pray for you at the Western Wall and/or light a candle in your name at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre or anywhere else in the Holy Land of Israel. • Should you have a personal request I will be more than happy to respond and even film it in a personal video. • Donations: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/zahishaked • Kindly share this site with your other friends/family that are interested in the rich and sacred history of Israel. • Thank you so much • Your tour guide • Zahi Shaked • / zahishakedisraelitourguide • / zahi_shaked_israeli_tour_guide • https://linktr.ee/zahishakedtourguide... • Israel Con a Aline • / @israelcomaline • • Mount Zion is one of the most impressive sites in Jerusalem - the Last Supper Room also called Cenaculum • Known also as the Cenaculum, according to Christian tradition, Jesus sat in this specific hall on the last Passover night before captured at Gethsemane and trialed to death by crucifixion. • During that meal Jesus stated the wine and bread his disciples are consuming symbolize his flesh and blood. • To this day the Sunday Mass contains a symbolic consumption of Jesus' flesh and blood. The Cenaculum is visited by crowds of excited Christian pilgrims on daily basis and was part of the itinerary of three Popes who visited the holy land in the years 1964, 2000, and 2009. • The room itself is really a Crusader structure dating to the 12th-13th Century, but by tradition, its origins are from Roman times. The structure also bears a Muslim prayer niche facing Mecca attesting that this room used to be also a mosque in the past. • Below the Last Supper Room is a compound consecrating the tomb of King David by Jewish tradition. This means that the whole building is uniquely sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims alike. • This weekend, the Church celebrates Pentecost, one of the most important feast days of the year that concludes the Easter season and celebrates the beginning of the Church. • Here’s what you need to know about the feast day. • The timing and origins of Pentecost • Pentecost always occurs 50 days after the resurrection of Jesus and 10 days after his ascension into heaven. Because Easter is a moveable feast without a fixed date, and Pentecost depends on the timing of Easter, Pentecost can fall anywhere between May 10 and June 13. • The name of the day itself is derived from the Greek word “pentecoste,” meaning 50th. • There is a parallel Jewish holiday, Shavu’ot, which falls 50 days after Passover. Shavu’ot is sometimes called the festival of weeks, referring to the seven weeks since Passover. • Originally a harvest feast, Shavu’ot now commemorates the sealing of the Old Covenant on Mount Sinai, when the Lord revealed the Torah to Moses on Mount Sinai. Every year, the Jewish people renew their acceptance of the gift of the Torah on this feast. • What happens at Pentecost? • In the Christian tradition, Pentecost is the celebration of the person of the Holy Spirit coming upon the Apostles, Mary, and the first followers of Jesus, who were gathered together in the Upper Room. • A “strong, driving” wind filled the room where they were gathered, and tongues of fire came to rest on their heads, allowing them to speak in different languages so that they could understand each other. It was such a strange phenomenon that some people thought the Christians were just drunk — but Peter pointed out that it was only the morning, and said the phenomenon was caused by the Holy Spirit. • The Holy Spirit also gave the apostles the other gifts and fruits necessary to fulfill the great commission — to go out and preach the Gospel to all nations. It fulfills the New Testament promise from Christ (Luke 24:46-49) that the Apostles would be “clothed with power” before they would be sent out to spread the Gospel. • The main event of Pentecost (the strong driving wind and tongues of fire) takes place in Acts 2:13, though the events immediately following (Peter’s homily, the baptism of thousands) continue through verse 41.
#############################
![](http://youtor.org/essay_main.png)