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"St. Peter
in Gallicantu"
Mount Zion, Jerusalem
Monday, December 23, 2013
Third Day of my Holy Land Trip, Mount Zion, Jerusalem
My Holy Land Trip
"St. Peter in Gallicantu"
Mount Zion, Jerusalem
The place believed as the High Priest Caiaphas’
palace. It is here that Jesus was arraigned before the high priest and the
Sanhedrin on Thursday night, before being sent to Pilate. Over the ruins of the
palace, several churches have been built since the 5th century.
It is only since the Middle Ages (11th century) that the site is no
longer considered as the palace of Caiaphas, but only as the one to which Peter
withdrew to weep after the denial, hence the name of the church, at the Cock’s
Crow.
Entrance and Sanctuary
Lower Church and Crypts
Significance of the church
Inside the Church of Peter in Gallicantu:
There are many caves and shelters in the basement of the church. According
to the tradition, these caves included a jail where Jesus was held after his
arrest. These underground caves were normal in many of the Roman period houses,
and served as cellars, water cisterns, and baths.
An Underground cave in the lower floor:
Mount Zion, Jerusalem
Mark 14:72
Immediately the rooster crowed the
second time. Then Peter remembered the word Jesus had spoken to him:
"Before the rooster crows twice you will disown me three times." And
he broke down and wept.
A sign Board Before the Church of St. Peter in Gallicantu:
The fabulous Saint Peter in-Gallicantu Church is built in the slopes of mount Zion. According to tradition, this was the place of the palace of high priest Caiaphas. Its name is given after the story of Peter's triple denial of Christ and the cock crowing twice.
Front view of the Church of St. Peter in Gallicantu:
Name of the church:
In Latin: Sanctus
Petrus in Gallicantu;
In
English: Saint Peter in Gallicantu, i.e., at the Cock’s Crow.
The name comes from the
episode during Christ’s Passion when Peter, in the courtyard of High Priest
Caiaphas, denied his Master three times, saying: “I do not know the man you are
talking about.” Just as he spoke the third time, “a cock crowed. The Lord turned
around and looked at Peter. And Peter remembered the statement which the Lord
had made to him, ‘Before the cock crows today, you will deny me three times.’
So he went out and wept bitterly” (Lk 22:60-62).
The place believed as the High Priest Caiaphas’
palace. It is here that Jesus was arraigned before the high priest and the
Sanhedrin on Thursday night, before being sent to Pilate. Over the ruins of the
palace, several churches have been built since the 5th century.
It is only since the Middle Ages (11th century) that the site is no
longer considered as the palace of Caiaphas, but only as the one to which Peter
withdrew to weep after the denial, hence the name of the church, at the Cock’s
Crow.
Front view of the Church of St. Peter in Gallicantu:
Location:
Located
on the eastern side of Mount Zion, St. Peter in Gallicantu Church was built in
1931 over the spot where Peter denied knowing Christ. It's also the site of
Caiaphas' palace where Jesus was brought to trial. The name,
"Gallicantu" means "the cock's crow" and is taken from the
event when Peter denied knowing Jesus three times, as the cock crowed each
time.
Front view of the Church of St. Peter in Gallicantu:
The church takes its name from
the Latin word "Gallicantu", meaning cock's-crow. This
is in commemoration of Peter's triple rejection of Jesus "...
before the cock crows twice." (Mark 14:30)
A Byzantine shrine dedicated to
Peter's repentance was erected on this spot in 457 AD, but was destroyed by the Fatimid caliph Al-Hakim
bi-Amr Allah in 1010. The chapel was rebuilt byCrusaders in 1102 and
given its present name. After the fall of Jerusalem the church again fell into
ruin and was not rebuilt until 1931. Today a golden rooster protrudes
prominently from the sanctuary roof in honor of its biblical connection. This
spot is also believed to be the location of the High Priest Caiaphas'
palace. According to the Pilgrim of Bordeaux in his Itinerarium
Burdigalense, "...going up from the Pool of Siloam to Mount Zion one
would come across the House of the Priest Caiaphas."
A statue in the court yard of the church: Peter, the Maid (the woman), the Roman soldier and the rooster (see on the top of the pillar):
A statue in the court yard of the church: Peter, the Maid (the woman), the Roman soldier and the rooster (see on the top of the pillar):
In
the court yard of the church is a statue that describes the events (see Mark
14) of the renunciation of Jesus by Peter, the maid, the Roman soldier and the
rooster (see on the top of the pillar). The situation from Luke 22: 56-58: 56And a
servant-girl, seeing him as he sat in the firelight and looking intently at
him, said, "This man was with Him too."57But he denied it, saying, "Woman, I do
not know Him." 58A little later, another saw him and said, "You are one of them
too!" But Peter said, "Man, I am not!"
A statue in the court yard of the church: Peter, the Maid (the woman), the Roman soldier and the rooster (see on
the top of the pillar):
Engraved sculpture on the outside wall (see the picture below), “After the Last
Supper, Jesus left with his disciples and crossed the Kidron valley to the
Garden of Gethsemane":
Engraved
sculpture on the outside wall (see the picture below), “those who had arrested Jesus
took him to Caiaphas the high priest, where the teachers of the law and the
elders had assembled”, Matthew 26:57.
Entrance and Sanctuary
The entrance to the church is from a parking lot which is located above
the main level of the church. In the courtyard is a statue that depicts the
events of the denial and includes its main figures; the cock, the woman, and
the Roman soldier. The entrance itself is bordered by shaped iron doors covered
with biblical situations. To the
right are two Byzantine-era mosaics found during excavation, these were most
likely part of the floor of the fifth-century shrine. The main sanctuary
contains large, multi-colored mosaics portraying figures from the New Testament. Facing the entrance is
a bound Jesus being questioned at Caiaphas' palace; on the right Jesus and the disciples are shown dining at the Last Supper; and on the left Peter,
considered the first Pope, are pictured in ancient papal dress. Perhaps the
most striking feature of the interior is the ceiling, which is dominated by a
huge cross-shaped window designed in a variety of colors. The fourteen Stations of the Cross also line the walls and are marked
with simple crosses.
Main Entrance of the Church:
Main Entrance of the Church:
Above the main Entrance of the Church:
Written in latin, "Dominus custodiat
Introitum tuum et exitum tuum" Ps.121
Meaning: "May the Lord keep thy
coming in and thy going out"
Psalm 120 (121)
In Latin:
1 Levavi oculos meos
in montes,
unde veniet auxilium mihi.
2 Auxilium meum a
Domino,
qui fecit cælum et terram.
3 Non det in
commotionem pedem tuum,
neque dormitet qui custodit te.
4 Ecce non dormitabit
neque dormiet
qui custodit Israël.
5 Dominus custodit
te;
Dominus protectio tua super manum dexteram
tuam.
6 Per diem sol non
uret te,
neque luna per noctem.
7 Dominus custodit te
ab omni malo;
custodiat animam tuam Dominus.
8 Dominus custodiat
introitum tuum et exitum tuum,
ex hoc nunc et usque in sæculum.
Psalm 120 (121)
Translation in English:
1 I will lift up mine
eyes unto the hills;
whence
cometh my help.
2 My help cometh from
the Lord,
who made
heaven and earth.
3 May he not suffer
thy foot to be moved,
that
keepeth thee will not slumber.
4 slumber nor sleep
He that
keepeth Israel.
5 The Lord is thy
keeper;
Lord is
thy protection upon thy right hand.
6 By the day the sun
will not burn you,
nor the
moon by night.
7 The LORD shall
preserve thee from all evil;
shall
preserve thy soul.
8 May the Lord keep
thy going in and thy going out,
from
henceforth now and forever.
Inside the Church of Peter in Gallicantu:
Inside the Church of Peter in Gallicantu:
Lower Church and Crypts
Beneath the upper church is a chapel which incorporates stone from
ancient grottos inside its walls. Down a hole in the center of the sanctuary
one can see caves that may have been part of the Byzantine shrine. These walls
are engraved with crosses left by fifth-century Christians. On an even lower level
there is a succession of caves from the Second Temple period. Since tradition
places the palace of Caiaphas on this site, many believe that Jesus may have
been imprisoned in one of these underground crypts after his arrest, however,
these underground caves were normal in many Roman-era homes, and often served
as cellars, water cisterns, and
baths. On the north side of the church is an ancient staircase that leads down
towards the Kidron Valley. This
may have been a passage from the upper city to the lower city during the first
temple period. Many Christians believe that Jesus followed this path down to
Gethsemane the night of his arrest.
Inside the Church of Peter in Gallicantu:
Significance of the church
The modern church,
first consecrated in 1931 and deconsecrated in 1997 after extensive renovations,
is part of a long tradition going back to the 5th century according to which Christians
have never ceased to commemorate on this spot Saint Peter’s triple denial of
Jesus in the courtyard of High Priest Caiaphas, as well as the repentance of
the Apostle after he had heard the cock’s crow and remembered the words Jesus
had told him.
Convinced of the importance of this episode in the Passion, Christians first tried to pinpoint the spot where it had taken place, then, around 450 A.D., sought to perpetuate its memory by building a church on the site. This church, as well as the others that followed, were all destroyed, as a cycle of violence took hold throughout the ages. The present structure is at least the fourth on this location.
The
site comprises a church and the mysterious Deep Pit over which it is built, as well as the
archaeological discoveries made here: foundations, cisterns, liturgical
artifacts, including an ancient stepped street undoubtedly taken by Jesus. It is the entire site which
allows pilgrims to relive the various events linked to Jesus’ religious trial
before the high priest, viz., his detention after his arrest at Gethsemane, his
arraignment the following morning, his trial before Caiaphas and the Sanhedrin,
the denial of Peter outside the palace as the trial was taking place within,
the repentance of the Apostle, and finally Peter’s reconciliation with
Jesus after the Resurrection on the shores of Lake Tiberius.
Inside the Church of Peter in Gallicantu:
Inside the Church, A painting in the altar:
Inside the Church, A painting of Jesus and Peter:
Inside the Church, Main Altar:
Inside the Church, A Sculpture of Jesus:
The prisons and pits in underground:
An Underground cave in the lower floor:
An Underground cave in the lower floor:
Probably where Jesus was kept after arrested:
Another side view of the Sacred prison, where Jesus was kept: