The Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fish, shortened to (The Church of the Multiplication), is a Roman Catholic church located at Tabgha, on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee in Israel. The modern church rests on the site of two earlier churches.
History
The earliest recording of a church commemorating
Jesus' feeding of the five thousand is by the Spanish pilgrim Egeria circa AD
380.
"Not
far away from there (Capernaum) are some stone steps where the Lord stood. And
in the same place by the sea is a grassy field with plenty of hay and many palm
trees. By them are seven springs, each flowing strongly. And this is the field
where the Lord fed the people with the five loaves and two fishes. In fact the
stone on which the Lord placed the bread has now been made into an altar. Past
the walls of this church goes the public highway on which the Apostle Matthew
had his place of custom. Near there on a mountain is a cave to which the Savior
climbed and spoke the Beatitudes."
The church was significantly enlarged around the
year 480 with floor mosaics also added at this time. These renovations are
attributed to the patriarch Matryrios.
In AD 614 Persians destroyed the original
Byzantine church, and the exact site of the shrine was lost for some 1,300
years.
In 1888 the site was acquired by the German
Catholic society (Deutsche Katholische Palaestinamission) which was associated
with the Archdiocese of Cologne.
An initial archeological survey was conducted in
1892, with full excavations beginning in 1932. These excavations resulted in
the discovery of mosaic floors from the 5th-century church, which was also
found to be built on the foundations of a much smaller 4th-century chapel.
The current church was built in 1982 to the same
floor plan as the 5th-century Byzantine church. Since 1939 it has been administered by the
Benedictine order as a daughter-house of the Dormition Abbey in Jerusalem.
On 17 June 2015, the church was significantly
damaged by an arson attack committed by Jewish extremists. Hebrew graffiti,
with the words “the false gods will be eliminated” (quoted from the Aleinu
prayer), was sprayed on the church walls and follows a history of right-wing
Jewish extremist arson and graffiti attacks against Christian sites. Four Israeli Jews age 18 to 24 (plus an
unnamed minor) were arrested by the Israel police and indicted for the arson.
The suspects are reportedly associated with the Jewish extremist,
ultra-nationalist "Hilltop Youth".
Interior
Layout
The interior of the church has a central nave and
two aisles. The sanctuary is backed by an apse with transepts on either side.
Under the altar is a block of limestone found during excavation, that is venerated as the stone on which the
miraculous meal was laid.
Mosaics
One of the main highlights of the church are its
restored 5th century mosaics. These mosaics are the earliest known examples of
figured pavement in Christian art in the Holy Land. The mosaics in the two
transepts depict various wetland birds and plants, with a prominent place given
to the lotus flower. This flower, which is not indigenous to the area, suggests
the artist's use of a Nilotic landscape popular in Roman and early-Byzantine
art. All the other motifs depict plants and animals from the Galilee. The
mosaics found in front of the altar depict two fish flanking a basket
containing loaves of bread.
Fifth
century remains
Also preserved in the modern church are the sill
of the left entrance to the atrium, basalt paving stones, and part of the apse
frieze. The foundations of the original 4th-century church can also be seen
under a glass panel to the right of the altar. Basalt presses and a font are
also displayed in the courtyard.
source : Wikipedia
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