Christliche Pilgerziele in Israel
Das Heilige Land, in dem Jesus lebte, lehrte, starb und auferstand – die bedeutendsten Stätten des Christentums in einem Land vereint.
Israel beherbergt die heiligsten Stätten des gesamten Christentums. Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth und der See Genezareth sind keine mythischen Orte, sondern reale Städte und Landschaften, die man besuchen, berühren und erleben kann. Die Grabeskirche markiert das Grab Jesu und wird täglich von Pilgern aus aller Welt besucht. Die Geburtskirche in Bethlehem steht über der überlieferten Geburtsstätte. Nazareth, die Stadt Jesu, beherbergt die Verkündigungsbasilika. Der See Genezareth, an dessen Ufer Jesus predigte und Apostel berief, ermöglicht stille Einkehr auf dem Wasser.
Reiseziele in Israel
Praktische Informationen
Christliche Geschichte in Israel
The land between the Jordan and the Mediterranean has been the geographic centre of the Christian story for two millennia. The four Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, and the historical core of Christian salvation history all unfold here: Jesus' birth at Bethlehem (Luke 2; Matthew 2), his upbringing at Nazareth (Luke 2:39-52), his three-year public ministry in Galilee and Judea (the Synoptic and Johannine Gospels), his arrest, trial, crucifixion and resurrection at Jerusalem (Matthew 26-28; Mark 14-16; Luke 22-24; John 18-21), and the descent of the Holy Spirit and founding of the church at Jerusalem (Acts 1-2).
The Helenian discovery of the Holy Sepulchre in 326-335 AD — when Constantine's mother located the supposed sites of the Crucifixion and the Tomb beneath a Roman temple of Aphrodite — inaugurated formal Christian pilgrimage. Egeria's late 4th-century pilgrimage account (the earliest extant Christian travel diary) records the liturgical practices that became the worldwide Christian liturgical year — the Way of the Cross, Holy Week procession, the Bethlehem Christmas vigils.
The Crusades (1099-1291) brought Latin Christianity to the Holy Land for two centuries, leaving the great Crusader basilicas at Nazareth (1101), Bethlehem (12th-century facade preserved), the Holy Sepulchre rebuilding (1149) and the Hospitaller fortress at Acre. The Franciscan Order received the formal Catholic mandate to guard the Catholic rights at the Holy Places in 1342 — the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land continues this role to the present day.
The 1852 Status Quo (an Ottoman firman of Sultan Abdülmecid I) formally codified the rights of six Christian denominations to the shared sites — the Holy Sepulchre, the Nativity in Bethlehem, the Annunciation in Nazareth, and the Tomb of the Virgin in Gethsemane. These rights are inviolable and continue to govern the day-to-day life of the holy sites today, including the famous 'Immovable Ladder' at the Holy Sepulchre that has not moved since the 1750s.
Modern Christian presence in the Holy Land: an estimated 175,000 Christians live in Israel and the Palestinian territories combined (approximately 2% of the total population). The community is overwhelmingly Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic, with significant Armenian, Coptic, Syriac and Protestant minorities. Pope Francis visited the Holy Land in 2014; Pope Francis was followed by the 28 May 2025 visit of Pope Leo XIV during his first papal foreign trip.
Pilgertipps für Israel
- Buchen Sie Unterkünfte in der Jerusalemer Altstadt oder Bethlehem mindestens 6 Monate vor Weihnachten und Ostern – Hotels füllen sich extrem schnell.
- Der Checkpoint 300 zwischen Israel und Bethlehem kann zu Stoßzeiten 30–90 Minuten dauern. Planen Sie morgens früh oder am späten Nachmittag ein, wenn der Andrang geringer ist.
- Für den Eintritt in Moscheen (Felsendom, Al-Aqsa) auf dem Tempelberg benötigen Nicht-Muslime spezielle Besuchszeiten – morgens von Sonntag bis Donnerstag. Der Tempelberg selbst ist kostenlos; die Moscheen sind für Nicht-Muslime geschlossen.
Christliche Traditionen in Israel
| Tradition | Description | Key Sites |
|---|---|---|
| Greek Orthodox | The largest Christian denomination in the Holy Land, with the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem (continuously occupied since 451 AD). Holds the principal Status Quo rights at the Holy Sepulchre, including the Greek Orthodox cells around the Edicule. Holy Fire ceremony on Orthodox Holy Saturday (11 April 2026). | Holy Sepulchre, Bethlehem, Mar Saba Monastery, Gethsemane |
| Roman Catholic | The Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land (since 1342) holds the principal Catholic rights at the holy sites. The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem (currently Cardinal Pizzaballa OFM, since 2020) is the senior Catholic bishop in the region. The Catholic Status Quo at the Holy Sepulchre is administered by Franciscans. | Holy Sepulchre, Bethlehem, Nazareth, Gethsemane, Tabgha |
| Armenian Apostolic | Holds the third largest set of Status Quo rights at the Holy Sepulchre, the Bethlehem Nativity and the Saint James Cathedral at the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem. The Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem (currently Nourhan Manougian, since 2013) is the head of the community. | Holy Sepulchre, Bethlehem, Saint James Quarter |
| Oriental Orthodox (Coptic, Syriac, Ethiopian) | The remaining Status Quo denominations at the Holy Sepulchre. The Ethiopian Tewahedo monastery on the roof of the Holy Sepulchre (Deir El Sultan) is the most exotic Christian site in Jerusalem. The Coptic chapel behind the Edicule and the Syriac chapel in the Holy Sepulchre also operate continuously. | Holy Sepulchre, Deir El Sultan, Coptic/Syriac Quarters |
| Protestant and Evangelical | No formal Status Quo rights but a large pilgrimage presence. The Garden Tomb (Anglican, since 1894) is the principal alternative site of the Crucifixion and Resurrection for Protestant pilgrims. Lutheran (the German Redeemer Church), Anglican (Saint George's Cathedral), Baptist and many Evangelical groups are active. | Garden Tomb, Saint George's Cathedral, Christ Church Jerusalem |