The Church of the Visitation

Church of the Visitation, Jeruzalem, Izrael

Website of the Sanctuary

+972. 2 641.72.91

Sanctuary Visiting Hours Summer: 8:00am to 12:00pm; 2:30pm to 6:00pm Winter: 8:00am to 12:00pm; 2:30pm to 6:00pm

Ain Karem – The Church of the Visitation

From the church of S. John to that of The Church of the Visitation, there is a spring called the “Virgin Spring” by the pilgrims of the fourteenth century. According to tradition, it was here that Mary met her cousin Elizabeth and sang a hymn of praise (the Magnificat), a song of gratitude to God.

“My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord;
my spirit rejoices in God my savior.
For he has looked upon his handmaid’s lowliness;
behold, from now on will all ages call me blessed”

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The Christian tradition

The Virgin Mary’s visit to Elizabeth was first set in a place other than that of the birth of Saint John at the beginning of the 14th century: “Zechariah’s house is in the mountains of Judea.. In this place there are two churches… and between these churches flows a spring that is quite full of water.

At the site of the first church, it is said, Elisabeth was greeted by the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is also said that the blessed John the Baptist was hidden there during the Slaughter of the Innocents. At the site of the second church, the blessed John the Baptist was born” (Brother Giovanni Fedanzola of Perugia, 1330).

Going beyond the gospel episode, the same church also conserves the memory of the hiding of Saint John the Baptist, taken up by the apocryphal protoevangelium of John (2nd century): “Beyond a small valley full of trees is the mountain toward which Elisabeth ran with her own son, saying “Mountain! Receive a mother and son!” And the mountain opened and offered them refuge. Herod’s soldiers who were following them reached that point and finding no one, returned, confused.

Even today one can see the place where this happened, marked in the rock. Above it is a small church, under which is a little grotto and in front of its entrance another little church has been added. From this grotto flows a spring that quenched the thirst of Elizabeth and John while they were in the mountain, staying there, served by an angel, until the death of Herod.” Relics of “earth from the grotto of Elizabeth and John” were conserved as early as the 7th century in Rome, in the Lateran treasury and elsewhere. A stone, exposed in the crypt, continues this tradition today.

Let us remain close in the same prayer! May the Lord bless you abundantly!

Plan of The Church of the Visitation

In the 14th century the sanctuary was under the care of Armenian monks, who left it shortly afterwards. The Franciscans acquired the site in 1679.
The excavations (by Father Bellarmino Bagatti, 1937) conducted in view of the construction of a new sanctuary (by the architect A. Barluzzi, 1939-40) brought into evidence the remains of the ancient memorial structures that make up part of the upper church and the crypt with an antique gallery faced in stone that ends over a well permanently fed by a thin stream of water. Of note is the well-conserved Crusader hall above the south side of the church.

1. Present-day entry from outside.
2. Byzantine cistern (6th-7th cent).
3. Well with a small spring ( 7th-12th cent).
4. Upper church.
5. Crusader hall (12th cent).

Let us remain close in the same prayer! May the Lord bless you abundantly!

The Christian tradition

The Virgin Mary’s visit to Elizabeth was first set in a place other than that of the birth of Saint John at the beginning of the 14th century: “Zechariah’s house is in the mountains of Judea.. In this place there are two churches… and between these churches flows a spring that is quite full of water. At the site of the first church, it is said, Elisabeth was greeted by the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is also said that the blessed John the Baptist was hidden there during the Slaughter of the Innocents. At the site of the second church, the blessed John the Baptist was born” (Brother Giovanni Fedanzola of Perugia, 1330).

Going beyond the gospel episode, the same church also conserves the memory of the hiding of Saint John the Baptist, taken up by the apocryphal protoevangelium of John (2nd century): “Beyond a small valley full of trees is the mountain toward which Elisabeth ran with her own son, saying “Mountain! Receive a mother and son!” And the mountain opened and offered them refuge. Herod’s soldiers who were following them reached that point and finding no one, returned, confused. Even today one can see the place where this happened, marked in the rock. Above it is a small church, under which is a little grotto and in front of its entrance another little church has been added. From this grotto flows a spring that quenched the thirst of Elizabeth and John while they were in the mountain,staying there, served by an angel, until the death of Herod.” Relics of “earth from the grotto of Elizabeth and John” were conserved as early as the 7th century in Rome, in the Lateran treasury and elsewhere. A stone, exposed in the crypt, continues this tradition today.

Let us remain close in the same prayer! May the Lord bless you abundantly!

Posted in The Holy Land