Friday, August 31, 2012

It’s Friday! [Friday, August 31, 2012]

Well today was cool. I did well on my Hebrew quiz and it was just a fun day in general! Oh I also went up against one of my friends in a competition to see which of us could write the Hebrew alphabet in cursive faster and I won. I was stoked! During Hebrew, we learned vowels and did a lot of exercises, so now I can at least sound out most Hebrew signs which is super exciting!!!
When we came into the caf to eat lunch, there was American food! Well mostly. I do not feel like I ate that much, but it was so rich that I was like immediately full. Worst part is that lunch was 30 minutes before our Regional Hike. Thankfully, the stomachache went away shortly after the trail got difficult. It was fun and we hiked several miles and stopped at a goat farm, a spring, and various other places along the way. It was a hard hike because at times we were hiking straight up a huge hill, but it was fun. I cannot wait to be in shape!
After the hike, we all quickly went off to take showers and prepare for Shabbat! At dinner, we did a traditional eating of a piece of bread and grape juice and sang a couple songs. Then we ate our actual big dinner. At chapel, the speaker we heard is actually the Pastor of the Church which we will be attending in Israel! He is so good!
After chapel, many in the group went over to the Miklat(bomb shelter/our study and play lounge) and played a game called signs for a little over an hour! It was so fun! I love every moment I get to spend with the Profs, their families, and with the group! I am so blessed to be here in the Holy Land. My friend even reminded me today that no matter what happens that we could complain about, it is such a privilege to be here.
I thank the Lord for this opportunity and for the amazing people that He is putting in my life and everyone’s through this trip. Well it has been almost a week since we got here and I cannot believe how fast it has flown. So far, Israel for a week has been amazing! It is very fun to eat Kosher and to just learn about a completely different culture than my own.
Well, we have church tomorrow and then we get to walk around the Old City! I’m very excited to buy a wraparound skirt! This upcoming week is going to be a busy one! Yay! Shabbat Shalom!
-Susan

Thursday, August 30, 2012

A Class-Filled Day [Thursday, August 30, 2012]


So today started off with an early morning class, on top of jetlag. Regional Studies was my first class at 8:00 am, followed by a 4 hour class period of Old Testament Archaeology. Both of the classes seem quite interesting though I must admit four hours was a little long.
Once they were done, I went to the library to read up for my Land and Bible class. I also studied the Hebrew alphabet because I have a quiz tomorrow and I am almost prepared for it! I am super excited that I will be able to read the Hebrew signs around town and on the map for our Regional Studies class.
Tonight consisted of playing the piano again in the Miklat and studying for Hebrew on the chalkboard. My day was pretty standard for a school day and I am having fun getting into the groove of studying over here.
Tomorrow is the first Regional Studies hike! We are hiking from where we live in Yad HaShmonah to Ein Farah. It is estimated to be about an 8 mile hike, so it should be harder than Jerusalem was but I am sure we will make it! :)
Also one thing I am super excited for is our last hike in Regional Studies. We will be hiking form Jericho to Jerusalem which will be 14 miles of rugged terrain. Jesus did this hike a lot! I’m so excited to be able to do this and all hikes and just learn about all the history of this land and connect it to the Bible! Yay!
Also shout out to my parents! Happy Anniversary! I love you both so much!
Well that is all for now! I should probably head off to bed. Tomorrow is our first Shabbat, so I’m quite excited and other than that it is just a normal day of classes with a hike in the middle and our first chapel to finish it off!
Basically I am praying that I get enough sleep that I am able to do well on the quiz and make it through the day tomorrow! Thank you so much for reading this! I am having so much fun with this blog so far! Love you!
-Susan

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

First Real Day of Class [Wednesday, August 29, 2012]


So I started out the day by rolling out of bed to go to breakfast after sleeping through the night for the first time since we got here! I came back and got ready to go to the classroom for a mysterious meeting. When we got there, baklava was on the table. It was Amy’s birthday! We had such fun celebrating and watching her give baklava to a guy (IBEX tradition).
After that I headed to the library where I spent most of my day getting homework and reading done for class.
I had Hebrew class today even though I’m not enrolled in Hebrew. For my Regional Studies class we have to read maps in Hebrew so the whole class is learning the Hebrew alphabet. It is so much fun, and so hard. We have a quiz on Friday, so I’m like going over the alphabet in my head all the time.
After dinner I returned to the library and then it was announced that we were going over to the Elvis Inn for Amy’s birthday! Sadly, when we went it was closed but there was an Elvis ice cream store in the same parking lot so we ate ice cream there. It was so fun to just hang out with everyone.
When we came back, I played piano and sang with Lauren and Jonny in the Miklat. So much fun! I’m still eating the grapes that I was eating yesterday as I write this blog. Today was a chill day but I’m still quite tired. I’m ready for a pretty full day of classes tomorrow which is when 2 of my classes will start [one of them being a 4 hour class period with lunch to split it up]. It isn’t as hard to study here as I originally thought it would be and the library is becoming the best place ever.

Random fact: I got a knot(in my muscle) on my ankle today. Honestly didn’t know you could get a knot there. Anyway, it was slightly swollen earlier and it is going down but I am going to get ice on it tomorrow. Thankfully I can barely feel it so it’s just a bit of a bother rather than a painful spot.

Well that concludes today. The verse I liked today was one that I read in one of my books. It is a verse in which God is talking to the Israelites. It just shows His care for the land and for His people. He knew what He was doing and I’m so thankful to be in this land and to be able to study it.

It is Deuteronomy 11:10-12 which says “For the land that you are entering to take possession of it is not like the land of Egypt, from which you have come, where you sowed your seed and irrigated it, like a garden of vegetables. But the land that you are going over to possess is a land of hills and valleys, which drinks water by the rain from heaven, a land that the Lord your God cares for. The eyes of the Lord your God are always upon it, from the beginning of the year to the end of the year.”

Well as usual, Israel is awesome! More to come!
-Susan

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

A Walk around the Old City [Tuesday, August 28, 2012]

Today we went to Jerusalem! I just couldn’t believe it! It was so much fun! It was also a 7.8 mile walk! I love the profs here and I’m just so blessed by how welcome they make us feel!
Our main thought today was whether we are praying for peace in Jerusalem. Not in the sense that we are disobeying God if we don’t pray for peace in Jerusalem, but that there will finally be peace in Jerusalem when the Lord returns and so we should long for His return and in that way pray for peace in Jerusalem as it talks about in Psalm 122[A Psalm of Ascent].
I am pretty sure that there are 35,000 people in the Old City. We entered through the Jaffa Gate and the first place we went in the Old City was the Petra Hostel from which we could see many sights. The Dome of the Rock was in the distance with the Mount of Olives behind it. There were also two gray domes which were the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It is the best candidate for where Christ was crucified and buried. The tradition that Christ was crucified there goes all the way back to 325 A.D. There are actually first century A.D. tombs in the church and so it could well be the place where Christ was crucified and buried. Also, in Jesus’ day this site was located outside the city.
Behind us was David’s Citadel which the Crusaders thought was David’s palace. They were mistaken, but the foundation stones date back to the time of Herod the Great. Also, the current walls of Jerusalem were built in 1537 A.D.(just a little fact for you all!) Also another interesting fact was that the Roman Emperor Hadrian renamed Israel to Palestina when he defeated the Jews, this is because of their enemy, the Philistines. I had never known there was a connection between Palestine and the name of the Philistines.
Another possible place for the crucifixion is at the Garden Tomb, which we viewed while walking on top of the city wall. The city wall was awesome and it felt like we walked on it forever! So fun! Charles Gordon had a theory that has now been around since the mid 1800’s that the hill looked like a skull and so it could be Golgotha. The tombs there are actually from the 6th century B.C.  and look like benches with headrests. No archaeologist will think this place is a possible crucifixion site.
From the wall, we saw the Rockefeller Museum where the Dead Sea Scrolls were first housed and were taken away to a safer place during the war of independence.
We then looked toward the Mount of Olives and remembered that Christ will return the same way he left, which is coming to the Mount of Olives on a cloud which we see in Zechariah 14:1-11. The Kidron Valley is between the Mount of Olives and Eastern Hill. One of the verses where the Kidron Valley is mentioned is John 18:1 where it tells of Jesus walking through the Kidron Valley on the way to the Garden of Gethsemane on the night He was betrayed.
One interesting thing is that all of the walls in Jerusalem have changed except the Eastern Wall whose boundaries have always remained the same. This is because it is right up to the Kidron Valley and if they moved at all, the wall would fall into the Valley.
We saw the pools of Bethesda which have 5 roofed colonnades and were the place that Jesus healed the man on the Sabbath in John 5:18. In this passage, Jesus is claiming to be God which is amazing! There are two Pools of Bethesda, the Northern and Southern pools which are separated by a divider and we were actually able to go down and see a cistern. There were Byzantine column bases standing on top of where the pools once were.
After this, the group sang “Give Thanks” and “The Doxology” in St. Anne’s church, and heard a duet of “Before the Throne of God Above” by Abraham and Lauren. We went to the Struthion Pool after that and were able to go below the stone pavements, or lithostrotos and see the pools and more stones. This is one possible place where Jesus could have been handed over to be crucified. The process would consist of 6 trials with a final sending off by Pilate. One problem is that in Jesus’ day the stone pavements were not there so there was no covering on the pools. This could not be the place where Jesus was sent off and it was more likely by Jaffa Gate. Herod had a palace there and this is possibly where Pilate stayed.
After we went to the pool, we visited the Western Wall which was an awesome experience! Jews have been praying here since 70 A.D. when the temple was destroyed. This is the original foundation of the temple mount and people are so respectful of it. They put written prayers in the wall and they back away from the wall without turning their backs to the wall. We left the Western Wall area and saw a Mikveh, and Lauren demonstrated the ritual cleansing an unclean person would undergo to become clean.
Our last stop was Zion Gate which is on Mount Zion. In the Old Testament, Zion is referring to the city of David, not the mountain. There are bullet holes in Zion Gate and those were made by Jordan during the War of Independence. There is also a city wall where they attached a bomb and when it blew up, only one stone of the wall fell out. In my opinion, that is a fun fact.
We then went back to Jaffa Gate and Moshe, our bus driver, picked us up and took us back to the Moshav. We ate dinner, cleaned up, and went out to play Volleyball. After that, I ate some grapes from the Biblical Gardens while doing my homework. It was an amazing day and I am so thankful for the blessing that has come in the form of IBEX. I love the group and am daily encouraged by seeing their love for God that pours out through their actions, words, and lives.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Orientation and Kiriat-jearim hike [Monday, August 27, 2012]


We made it to Israel safely yesterday with few complications! Then, we had a fun time settling into our new home!
Today the group was somewhat jetlagged but we were able to make it through the day! We started out at the Moshav with a yummy breakfast and then headed off to orientation. We learned about what to and what not to do. We also learned some of what life will be like here! We were then able to tour the campus and see where everything is!
After lunch, we had our first Land and the Bible class! Once that was done, we headed on a hike to Kiriat-jearim and Abu Ghosh! It was so fun, but tiring because I am out of shape. First we hiked along the Kiriat-jearim Ridge Route and headed up a hill toward a Catholic Church. We stood on a hill outside the church and looked out at the landscape while learning some that had happened in Kiriat-jearim, like that the Ark of the Covenant resided there for a period of time. We also looked at an olive tree! Then, we went inside the church and sang “It is Well” together and heard a beautiful solo by Abraham, who sang “Rock of Ages”.
After this, we went to a spring in Abu Ghosh and Bill explained that this spring is the reason that there are people in that valley since, of course, water is needed in a place where people live. Some of us bent down and drank some of the water! It was nice and cool! We then went to a market in Abu Ghosh and ate yummy grapes and warm pita bread!
After that, we headed to another Catholic church that was established during the time of the Crusaders(1099-1299 A.D.). So the church was built at some point within that range. The grounds had beautiful flowers and palm trees! We went inside and sang “How Great Thou Art”! I love that we just sing songs everywhere! It is the best! To God be the glory!
After that we went down some steps inside the church and there was another spring. Once we came out, we were able to take many pictures and just enjoy being in Israel with each other! A bus came and picked us up from the church and took us back to the Moshav where we ate dinner. After dinner, we played volleyball for about 2 hours! It was so much fun even though I am so bad at it! Such a good workout! By that time, it was time to come back to the room and prepare for our all-day Jerusalem walk tomorrow! So excited!
-Susan

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Relying upon the Lord for guidance!


This morning I was just thinking and wondering about whether it was God’s will for me to go on this trip. My thought was that nothing dramatic happened that allowed me to be on this wonderful team and there had not been this abrupt door opening, but when I looked at it further I could see all the little pieces line up and I could really see that God had quietly guided me and opened the doors so that I could sign up. I have wanted to study abroad for a number of years and as soon as I found out about Israel, I could not get it out of my mind. I went back and forth about whether I wanted to go to IBEX because I had my heart set on studying abroad in someplace like India or England. Then suddenly I realized that I would be going to the land that had my Savior written all over it. I would be able to look at the Bible and stand in a place and see somewhat of what it may have looked like in the times of Jesus and in the times when Israel conquered the land. I began to get so excited and all the other dreams for studying abroad faded to the background and I wanted to go to Israel. The only problem was that I had heard that biology majors are rarely able to go. My heart dropped and so the Fall semester of my Freshman year I went up to my intimidating Chemistry professor and academic advisor Dr. Jones and asked him whether it would be even possible to consider studying about in Israel. He looked at my credits and said that if I wanted to go, I was going. I couldn’t believe my ears. He then told me that actually during many of the semesters, the second largest major in IBEX is Biology. I couldn’t believe it. I immediately went and signed up for IBEX Fall 2012 because that was the earliest possible date that I could go. I was accepted and had signed up for IBEX two years before I would go. Back then it seemed like it was so far away, and now I am four days away from leaving for the Holy Land. God opened the door so that I could go to IBEX and he opened the door to a semester where so many of my friends are going. The best part is that many other Biology majors get to go, but I also know many people who are not Biology majors. I just cannot begin to express God’s goodness and the peace (and EXCITEMENT!) that He has given me regarding Israel and that I feel as I am about to begin this wonderful journey with some of my best friends and people that I will soon be friends and Fall 2012 Ibexxers with!! =] This is just something that God laid on my heart this morning and I decided to share. I also wanted to share this verse because it is so true and because I am travelling to a sun-scorched land.

The LORD will guide you always; he will satisfy your needs in a sun-scorched land and will strengthen your frame. You will be like a well-watered garden, like a spring whose waters never fail.
Isaiah 58:11

Love you all! =] Can’t wait to begin the travels to Israel!

Monday, August 20, 2012

Pre-Departure

Hi! I decided I should have one pre-IBEX blogpost! It is now five days until my friends and I leave for Israel! I cannot express how excited I am. My whole room is exploding with all the items that need to be packed away. I have gotten my camelbak and my Tevas for all the long hikes on hot days. Now, I am just making sure I get all the little essentials packed away.
Having lived about 15 minutes from college throughout the past two years, it is a little nervewracking to realize that if I leave something behind I cannot simply drive home and get it. Other than this, packing has been fun so far! I have wanted to study abroad for several years now and I am so excited that the Lord has blessed me with this amazing opportunity!
We were assigned homework to do before we get to IBEX(Israel Bible Extension) and I have almost completed the amount that we are supposed to finish before we arrive. It is so exciting because the assignment is to read a book that corresponds to passages of the Bible, look up the locations of events on a corresponding map, and then answer questions about what has gone on in this land that we are about to travel to.
So I thought I would share what I am most looking forward to and what I am least looking forward to. The hardest part for me is leaving my family. The longest I have ever been away from them is five weeks and this trip will be fifteen weeks. Yet, I am not super worried about it because I know we can keep up on skype and that the time will fly! The best part is that I am travelling to the land that I have read about in my Bible my entire life! I feel quite blessed and I am looking forward to sharing my actual journey through Israel with you all in the upcoming weeks and months! =] Love you all!
-Susan