(Communicated by the Israel Ministry of Tourism Infodesk)
Following the major success of the special exhibition
"Pure Gold"
at the Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem, viewed by more than 150,000
people, another special exhibition is scheduled to open at the museum on
23 October 2013. The
Book of Books exhibition, presented in cooperation with
Verbum Domini, will display the most important biblical texts ever to be seen in Israel in one show.
The exhibition, which will trace the Jewish roots of Christianity
and the dissemination of monotheistic faith, will showcase, among
others, fragments from the Septuagint, the earliest New Testament
Scriptures, exquisite illuminated manuscripts, rare fragments of the
Cairo Geniza and original pages from the Gutenberg Bible.
Copyright: Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem
For the last two thousand years, the Bible has been considered the
greatest literary creation that humanity has known. Looked upon by many
as the word of God, the Bible has been civilization's cornerstone and a
standard against which all else is measured. The Bible has been an
everlasting and unchanging force that has impacted and shaped humanity
both on an individual and collective level for over two millennia. Its
books, chapters and verses have been the ultimate source of law,
knowledge and wisdom, love, mercy and forgiveness, but also the cause of
much pain and suffering. Two of the greatest monotheistic religions,
Judaism and Christianity, are based on the Bible, the Hebrew Bible
(Tanakh) and Christian Bible (Old and New Testament) respectively. It is
the most popular, translated and printed book in history – it is The
Book of all Books.
The Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem is proud to present this
exhibition on the Bible and its people. Starting from the Second Temple
period, the time of the writing of the Dead Sea scrolls and the birth of
Christianity, through the Middle Ages, invention of printing until
modern times, the exhibition explores the development of the Bible side
by side with the spread of Judaism and Christianity from the Land of
Israel to the rest of the world.