what I specially like about this place are two things: it makes you read the biblical texts more in detail and that it is such a humble and small place. Really a delight after all the gold and glitter in other churches.
Brother Danny, Thank you soooo much for these videos,. Very wonderful to see, love walking Through with you. Blesses my heart. ❤️ GOD'S riches blessings on you. See you someday soon.🙏🎺
Wish my family and I could take the tour with you in person. This is a wonderful substitute! I value hearing your pronunciation of names, places, verses! Awesome! Shalom!!
Beautiful place, we’d just visited Mary’s tomb and a Benedictine monk let us into this wonderful place. Love your videos my friend and I hope everything is getting back to normal now.
Got to be the most beautiful church in the world in both context and architecture. Wonderful. Perhaps they went into the olive press to fill their lamps.
Wow never saw this nice to know the truth nice information brother Adonai keep on giving u the strength & courage to keep on making this amazing video with evidence of the scriptures MUCHAS GRACIAS= thank u so much 👏👏👏👏🙌👆
I like your video I been in the holy land before but I don't remember most of your videos, thank you , but I hope you post them in sequence order , thank you sweet Danny
Danny, thank you so much for all your painstaking effort. Each of your videos takes me to a different level of awe and nostalgia. I was very blessed to have visited the Holy Land late 2019 before Covid hit, so being able to follow you around in Jerusalem again brings back such fond memories and a deep longing to return. Fyi, I made a contribution via PayPal to you a few days back so I'm hoping you received it. If you could acknowledge receipt, that will reassure me the transaction went through safely. I hope to contribute as much as I can albeit it cannot compare to what you could actually be earning as a working guide but I hope with all your other viewers' help, the donations could collectively keep you going. Stay safe and keep up the amazing work. Shalom.
bHi. I recieve an overwelming number of donations! thank you so much!!. But I only have the email of the sender, so I can't tell if to connect it to you ("B tmW"). But if you see it was deducted from your account it means I receieved it ! Thank you again and God bless you!
Hi Danny! Thank you for your vlog! I am learning so much. You are a blessing to the world. I contributed to your project via PayPal . You are a scientist , an artist, and a teacher.. thank you for giving us this gift of the Holy Land.
Shalom! Good job Danny! The volume was louder today. I saw you were wearing the "dead cat attachment". Todah rabbah for this teaching!!! I never knew the olive press was in a cave where the talmidim fell asleep. I follow your logic this could be the site based on writings of visitors dated back to the 5th & 6th century. Interesting. Have you ever studied the prophecies in the Tenach about the Messiah and how to recognize who he will be?
No offense, but the Messiah is Jesus Christ. With all respect, ask God to show you who his Messiah is. I think it’s difficult to catch it intellectually, but we have to catch it spiritually. God bless you and shalom! 🙏
Hi Danny, Didn't they recently (sometime in 2021) discover a ancient olive oil production area just across the road from the Church of All Nations and the Garden of Gethsemane, in the Gihon Valley area? I seem to remember reading something about that, but perhaps I am confused on where that was found.
Could the flat stones have been reutilized for another olive oil producer or use? Or were they fixed to the floor and maybe had to be carved out or chiseled out? Also, if the weather was cool that evening a cave full of people would be warmer. I do not know if people carried bed roles with them while traveling then?
Forgive me if this is a silly question, but is it true that in Jesus time there was a bridge across the Kidron Valley linking the Golden Gate and the base of the Mount of Olives? Did a a pyre stand there upon which red heffers were sacrificed? Is there any archeological evidence for this?
@@danny.the.digger it is a church. If there is an altar there, it is a chapel or a church. No need to apologize, it’s just that there are many Catholic Churches, chapels, spots, whatever, but I find many Israeli tour guides refuse to say this. As a proud Roman Catholic from Saint Peter, 2,000 years ago, Catholics were the first Christians. Not Greek, nor anyone else. When Christ appointed Peter as head of the church, to start it, Christ never told anyone not the Greeks, as they may claim. Saint Paul went to Greece to try and convert the Greeks as they were into false gods as Athena, Diana, etc... Saint Paul was the one not Christ who told Timothy to build a church in Greece. While Peter was saying the Mass in Latin in Rome underground, as that was the language of that day. This may be the reason I would choose a Catholic tour guide perhaps a priest. Although when you keep saying the “Crusader church” what exactly does that mean? We don’t say that. The crusaders were called upon because the Muslims were trying to ruin the Holy Land, the Catholic Crusaders DEFENDED your land against them. You should be thanking them even though it was a fight to the finish, your armies in the Torah weren’t so pretty either, and God led a lot of them. Thank God for the Crusaders , otherwise we’d all be speaking Arabic.
@@Who63 “Crusaders church” means a church built in Crusaders times. They were all Catholic of course. And I’m sorry, but while they may have defended holy Christian sites in the Holy Land they massacred Jews in Germany and Poland on the way to the holy land and also in Jerusalem when they conquered it. Killing “infidels” was NEVER part of Jesus’ original message
@@danny.the.digger But the Jews did it for centuries. The Crusades were expeditions undertaken, in fulfillment of a solemn vow, to deliver the Holy Places from Mohammedan tyranny. The origin of the word may be traced to the cross made of cloth and worn as a badge on the outer garment of those who took part in these enterprises. Medieval writers use the terms crux (pro cruce transmarina, Charter of 1284, cited by Du Cange s.v. crux), croisement (Joinville), croiserie (Monstrelet), etc. Since the Middle Ages the meaning of the word crusade has been extended to include all wars undertaken in pursuance of a vow, and directed against infidels, i.e. against Mohammedans, pagans, heretics, or those under the ban of excommunication. The wars waged by the Spaniards against the Moors constituted a continual crusade from the eleventh to the sixteenth century; in the north of Europe crusades were organized against the Prussians and Lithuanians; the extermination of the Albigensian heresy was due to a crusade, and, in the thirteenth century, the popes preached crusades against John Lackland and Frederick II. But modern literature has abused the word by applying it to all wars of a religious character, as, for instance, the expedition of Heraclius against the Persians in the seventh century and the conquest of Saxony by Charlemagne. The idea of the crusade corresponds to a political conception which was realized in Christendom only from the eleventh to the fifteenth century; this supposes a union of all peoples and sovereigns under the direction of the popes. All crusades were announced by preaching. After pronouncing a solemn vow, each warrior received a cross from the hands of the pope or his legates, and was thenceforth considered a soldier of the Church. Crusaders were also granted Indulgences and temporal privileges, such as exemption from civil jurisdiction, inviolability of persons or lands, etc. Of all these wars undertaken in the name of Christendom, the most important were the Eastern Crusades. The history of the Crusades is therefore intimately connected with that of the popes and the Church. These Holy Wars were essentially a papal enterprise. The idea of quelling all dissensions among Christians, of uniting them under the same standard and sending them forth against the Mohammedans, was conceived in the eleventh century, that is to say, at a time when there were as yet no organized states in Europe, and when the pope was the only potentate in a position to know and understand the common interests of Christendom. At this time the Turks threatened to invade Europe, and the Byzantine Empire seemed unable to withstand the enemies by whom it was surrounded. Urban II then took advantage of the veneration in which the holy places were held by the Christians of the West and entreated the latter to direct their combined forces against the Mohammedans and, by a bold attack, check their progress.
The result of this effort was the establishment of the Christian states in Syria. While the authority of the popes remained undisputed in Europe, they were in a position to furnish these Christian colonies the help they required; but when this authority was shaken by dissensions between the priesthood and the empire, the crusading army lost the unity of command so essential to success. The maritime powers of Italy, whose assistance was indispensable to the Christian armies, thought only of using the Crusades for political and economic ends. Other princes, first the Hohenstaufen and afterwards Charles of Anjou, followed this precedent, the crusade of 1204 being the first open rebellion against the pontifical will. Finally, when, at the close of the Middle Ages, all idea of the Christian monarchy had been definitively cast aside, when state policy was the sole influence that actuated the Powers of Europe, the crusade seemed a respectable but troublesome survival. In the fifteenth century Europe permitted the Turks to seize Constantinople, and princes were far less concerned about their departure for the East than about finding a way out of the fulfillment of their vow as crusaders without losing the good opinion of the public. Thereafter all attempts at a crusade partook of the nature of political schemes. Notwithstanding their final overthrow, the Crusades hold a very important place in the history of the world. Essentially the work of the popes, these Holy Wars first of all helped to strengthen pontifical authority; they afforded the popes an opportunity to interfere in the wars between Christian princes, while the temporal and spiritual privileges which they conferred upon crusaders virtually made the latter their subjects. At the same time this was the principal reason why so many civil rulers refused to join the Crusades. It must be said that the advantages thus acquired by the popes were for the common safety of Christendom. From the outset the Crusades were defensive wars and checked the advance of the Mohammedans who, for two centuries, concentrated their forces in a struggle against the Christian settlements in Syria; hence Europe is largely indebted to the Crusades for the maintenance of its independence. Besides, the Crusades brought about results of which the popes had never dreamed, and which were perhaps the most important of all.
www.paypal.com/donate/?business=CVBU38UGWV5UN&no_recurring=0¤cy_code=USD
Thank you for your effort to show those holy places which we have not seen. God bless you.
what I specially like about this place are two things: it makes you read the biblical texts more in detail and that it is such a humble and small place. Really a delight after all the gold and glitter in other churches.
Who knew this sight existed? Whoa! Simply amazing! Thank you for doing what you love! I can not thank you enough!
Thanks Danny for these videos! Keep them coming
Thank you! 🙂 Will do my best!
We have no complaints about your production of these tours. It feels like we are right there with you.
You're taking me places I've never been before. Thank you Danny.
Brother Danny, Thank you soooo much for these videos,. Very wonderful to see, love walking Through with you. Blesses my heart. ❤️ GOD'S riches blessings on you. See you someday soon.🙏🎺
SO amazing.... And, my DATA is finished for the month !!!!!!! But, I will make a plan. Gotta see more. THANK YOU for this upload, Danny !!!
My pleasure 🙂
Thanks, Danny I look forward to your videos, you're the best youtuber .you're taking us places we have never seen before
Wish my family and I could take the tour with you in person. This is a wonderful substitute! I value hearing your pronunciation of names, places, verses! Awesome! Shalom!!
My pleasure 😇
THANK YOU FOR ALL YOUR GOOD AND BEAUTIFUL SHOWINGS AND INTERESTING TEACHINGS FROM ISRAEL BLESSING TO YOU FROM SWEDEN
god kväll sverige!
What a wonderful site ! Thank you so much Danny! Looking forward to trip #17 😊
stay tuned...
Danny, You are the superstar! Keep it up.
Aren't superstars rich? 🙂 I'm definitely not 😞 ah ah
I am very impressed that your posting everyday!!
We will add this site to our next trip. Thank you.
My pleasure. Glad you like it 🙂
Regardless of ur beliefs the history of Jesus, the Bible and the Holy Lands is fascinating! Keep up the awesome work!
Beautiful place, we’d just visited Mary’s tomb and a Benedictine monk let us into this wonderful place. Love your videos my friend and I hope everything is getting back to normal now.
Got to be the most beautiful church in the world in both context and architecture. Wonderful.
Perhaps they went into the olive press to fill their lamps.
Wonderful!
Wow never saw this nice to know the truth nice information brother Adonai keep on giving u the strength & courage to keep on making this amazing video with evidence of the scriptures MUCHAS GRACIAS= thank u so much 👏👏👏👏🙌👆
Thanks for sharing and educating me again about something I didn't know existed before. Many blessings for you and your family
Thank you Steve. Glad you liked it!
wonderful as always!
Great video Danny!
Awesome :) Going to Israel in April, I will definitely visit :)
your awesome
I like your video I been in the holy land before but I don't remember most of your videos, thank you , but I hope you post them in sequence order , thank you sweet Danny
They are posted also as a series
Love your videos.
Danny, thank you so much for all your painstaking effort. Each of your videos takes me to a different level of awe and nostalgia. I was very blessed to have visited the Holy Land late 2019 before Covid hit, so being able to follow you around in Jerusalem again brings back such fond memories and a deep longing to return. Fyi, I made a contribution via PayPal to you a few days back so I'm hoping you received it. If you could acknowledge receipt, that will reassure me the transaction went through safely. I hope to contribute as much as I can albeit it cannot compare to what you could actually be earning as a working guide but I hope with all your other viewers' help, the donations could collectively keep you going. Stay safe and keep up the amazing work. Shalom.
bHi. I recieve an overwelming number of donations! thank you so much!!. But I only have the email of the sender, so I can't tell if to connect it to you ("B tmW"). But if you see it was deducted from your account it means I receieved it ! Thank you again and God bless you!
@@danny.the.digger That's great, Danny. Happy to hear. Bevakasha. Bernie from Canada.
Looks great. Thank you Danny!
Hi Danny!
Thank you for your vlog! I am learning so much. You are a blessing to the world. I contributed to your project via PayPal . You are a scientist , an artist, and a teacher.. thank you for giving us this gift of the Holy Land.
Thank you !!
Owsome videos ❤
Shalom! Good job Danny! The volume was louder today. I saw you were wearing the "dead cat attachment".
Todah rabbah for this teaching!!! I never knew the olive press was in a cave where the talmidim fell asleep. I follow your logic this could be the site based on writings of visitors dated back to the 5th & 6th century. Interesting. Have you ever studied the prophecies in the Tenach about the Messiah and how to recognize who he will be?
No offense, but the Messiah is Jesus Christ. With all respect, ask God to show you who his Messiah is. I think it’s difficult to catch it intellectually, but we have to catch it spiritually. God bless you and shalom! 🙏
Sleepers in a cave, what an important coencidence. Thank you for this nice video
Danny I wonder if you will be interested to find more or less the places from where David Roberts paint his images of Jerusalem?
Sure. That could be a great series for Instagram as well..
Hi Danny, Didn't they recently (sometime in 2021) discover a ancient olive oil production area just across the road from the Church of All Nations and the Garden of Gethsemane, in the Gihon Valley area? I seem to remember reading something about that, but perhaps I am confused on where that was found.
No that I know
Isn’t there a first century olive press next to the church?
There was! Yes
Danny I can't hear you child sound is to low. You can hear at beginning of video but when you go into church it's to low.
I finally got a wireless mic. I hope this will solve the problem
Could the flat stones have been reutilized for another olive oil producer or use? Or were they fixed to the floor and maybe had to be carved out or chiseled out? Also, if the weather was cool that evening a cave full of people would be warmer. I do not know if people carried bed roles with them while traveling then?
Bed roles are for spoiled humans of the plastic age.. 🙂
Forgive me if this is a silly question, but is it true that in Jesus time there was a bridge across the Kidron Valley linking the Golden Gate and the base of the Mount of Olives? Did a a pyre stand there upon which red heffers were sacrificed? Is there any archeological evidence for this?
This bridge is indeed mentioned in the Mishna, but so far no archaeological evidence of it have been uncovered.
at 6:43 the left column shows an uncanny resemblance to the profile of Jesus.
I don’t see anything.. want to send a screenshot?
Is there a cost to visit this site?
No
Is that place open to the public?
Unless I say so, all the sites I review are open to the public
Good to know thanks !
Interesting that Jesus and his disciples sought shelter in an olive press.
🙏🇳🇮🙏🇳🇮🙏🙏✝️🇳🇮🇺🇸
🇿🇦♥️
This is a Catholic Church. Please say this when you enter them.
It's more of a chapel, or a crypt, but if I didn't mention the Catholic costudy of the site I do apologize.
@@danny.the.digger it is a church. If there is an altar there, it is a chapel or a church. No need to apologize, it’s just that there are many Catholic Churches, chapels, spots, whatever, but I find many Israeli tour guides refuse to say this.
As a proud Roman Catholic from Saint Peter, 2,000 years ago, Catholics were the first Christians. Not Greek, nor anyone else. When Christ appointed Peter as head of the church, to start it, Christ never told anyone not the Greeks, as they may claim. Saint Paul went to Greece to try and convert the Greeks as they were into false gods as Athena, Diana, etc... Saint Paul was the one not Christ who told Timothy to build a church in Greece. While Peter was saying the Mass in Latin in Rome underground, as that was the language of that day.
This may be the reason I would choose a Catholic tour guide perhaps a priest. Although when you keep saying the “Crusader church” what exactly does that mean? We don’t say that. The crusaders were called upon because the Muslims were trying to ruin the Holy Land, the Catholic Crusaders
DEFENDED your land against them. You should be thanking them even though it was a fight to the finish, your armies in the Torah weren’t so pretty either, and God led a lot of them.
Thank God for the Crusaders , otherwise we’d all be speaking Arabic.
@@Who63 “Crusaders church” means a church built in Crusaders times. They were all Catholic of course. And I’m sorry, but while they may have defended holy Christian sites in the Holy Land they massacred Jews in Germany and Poland on the way to the holy land and also in Jerusalem when they conquered it. Killing “infidels” was NEVER part of Jesus’ original message
@@danny.the.digger But the Jews did it for centuries.
The Crusades were expeditions undertaken, in fulfillment of a solemn vow, to deliver the Holy Places from Mohammedan tyranny. The origin of the word may be traced to the cross made of cloth and worn as a badge on the outer garment of those who took part in these enterprises. Medieval writers use the terms crux (pro cruce transmarina, Charter of 1284, cited by Du Cange s.v. crux), croisement (Joinville), croiserie (Monstrelet), etc. Since the Middle Ages the meaning of the word crusade has been extended to include all wars undertaken in pursuance of a vow, and directed against infidels, i.e. against Mohammedans, pagans, heretics, or those under the ban of excommunication. The wars waged by the Spaniards against the Moors constituted a continual crusade from the eleventh to the sixteenth century; in the north of Europe crusades were organized against the Prussians and Lithuanians; the extermination of the Albigensian heresy was due to a crusade, and, in the thirteenth century, the popes preached crusades against John Lackland and Frederick II. But modern literature has abused the word by applying it to all wars of a religious character, as, for instance, the expedition of Heraclius against the Persians in the seventh century and the conquest of Saxony by Charlemagne. The idea of the crusade corresponds to a political conception which was realized in Christendom only from the eleventh to the fifteenth century; this supposes a union of all peoples and sovereigns under the direction of the popes. All crusades were announced by preaching. After pronouncing a solemn vow, each warrior received a cross from the hands of the pope or his legates, and was thenceforth considered a soldier of the Church. Crusaders were also granted Indulgences and temporal privileges, such as exemption from civil jurisdiction, inviolability of persons or lands, etc. Of all these wars undertaken in the name of Christendom, the most important were the Eastern Crusades.
The history of the Crusades is therefore intimately connected with that of the popes and the Church. These Holy Wars were essentially a papal enterprise. The idea of quelling all dissensions among Christians, of uniting them under the same standard and sending them forth against the Mohammedans, was conceived in the eleventh century, that is to say, at a time when there were as yet no organized states in Europe, and when the pope was the only potentate in a position to know and understand the common interests of Christendom. At this time the Turks threatened to invade Europe, and the Byzantine Empire seemed unable to withstand the enemies by whom it was surrounded. Urban II then took advantage of the veneration in which the holy places were held by the Christians of the West and entreated the latter to direct their combined forces against the Mohammedans and, by a bold attack, check their progress.
The result of this effort was the establishment of the Christian states in Syria. While the authority of the popes remained undisputed in Europe, they were in a position to furnish these Christian colonies the help they required; but when this authority was shaken by dissensions between the priesthood and the empire, the crusading army lost the unity of command so essential to success. The maritime powers of Italy, whose assistance was indispensable to the Christian armies, thought only of using the Crusades for political and economic ends. Other princes, first the Hohenstaufen and afterwards Charles of Anjou, followed this precedent, the crusade of 1204 being the first open rebellion against the pontifical will. Finally, when, at the close of the Middle Ages, all idea of the Christian monarchy had been definitively cast aside, when state policy was the sole influence that actuated the Powers of Europe, the crusade seemed a respectable but troublesome survival. In the fifteenth century Europe permitted the Turks to seize Constantinople, and princes were far less concerned about their departure for the East than about finding a way out of the fulfillment of their vow as crusaders without losing the good opinion of the public. Thereafter all attempts at a crusade partook of the nature of political schemes. Notwithstanding their final overthrow, the Crusades hold a very important place in the history of the world. Essentially the work of the popes, these Holy Wars first of all helped to strengthen pontifical authority; they afforded the popes an opportunity to interfere in the wars between Christian princes, while the temporal and spiritual privileges which they conferred upon crusaders virtually made the latter their subjects. At the same time this was the principal reason why so many civil rulers refused to join the Crusades. It must be said that the advantages thus acquired by the popes were for the common safety of Christendom. From the outset the Crusades were defensive wars and checked the advance of the Mohammedans who, for two centuries, concentrated their forces in a struggle against the Christian settlements in Syria; hence Europe is largely indebted to the Crusades for the maintenance of its independence. Besides, the Crusades brought about results of which the popes had never dreamed, and which were perhaps the most important of all.
🙄The Mercy gate. Where the messiah will be one day? Better He won't get run over by a bus trying to get to it!💙
😂
Easier is a pagan holiday of worshipping ishtar; idolatry.
Eashoa, M'shika and disciples observed Passover, not easter.