Jump to content

Zion: Difference between revisions

2 bytes removed ,  1 year ago
no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Zion''' appears in the Old Testament as the name of a Jebusite city conquered by [[King David]].<ref>1 Chron. 11:5; 2 Sam. 5:6–9.</ref> Thereafter, the City of David was known as Mount Zion. When Solomon’s Temple was later erected on the upper part of the same hill, Mount Zion came to refer to that site.  
'''Zion''' appears in the Old Testament as the name of a Jebusite city conquered by [[King David]].<ref>1 Chron. 11:5; 2 Sam. 5:6–9.</ref> Thereafter, the City of David was known as Mount Zion. When Solomon’s Temple was later erected on the upper part of the same hill, Mount Zion came to refer to that site.  


<blockquote>With the destruction of Jerusalem and the Babylonian captivity, historical memory of the site of David’s city was lost, and a hill on the other side of the valley was assumed to be its original location and is known today as Mount Zion. It is said that the [[Mother Mary]] kept the flame of the Mother on behalf of earth’s evolutions on Mount Zion in a house overlooking the city and the temple, the Cedron Valley, and the Mount of Olives. There in the upper chamber that became the gathering place of the disciples and where the first Christian church was established, Mary served the Logos during her final years of glory. It is in this place that Christians guard the memory of the dormition, or “falling asleep,” of the Blessed Mother.<ref>{{MMD}}, Introduction}}.</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>With the destruction of Jerusalem and the Babylonian captivity, historical memory of the site of David’s city was lost, and a hill on the other side of the valley was assumed to be its original location and is known today as Mount Zion. It is said that the [[Mother Mary]] kept the flame of the Mother on behalf of earth’s evolutions on Mount Zion in a house overlooking the city and the temple, the Cedron Valley, and the Mount of Olives. There in the upper chamber that became the gathering place of the disciples and where the first Christian church was established, Mary served the Logos during her final years of glory. It is in this place that Christians guard the memory of the dormition, or “falling asleep,” of the Blessed Mother.<ref>{{MMD}}, Introduction.</ref></blockquote>


== The New Jerusalem ==
== The New Jerusalem ==