Located on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem next to the Garden of Gethsemane, the Church of All Nations, also known as the Church or Basilica of the Agony, is a Roman Catholic Church.

Saint Helena
Church of the Holy Sepulcher
Coenaculum
Ecce Homo
Garden of Gethsemane
Church of All Nations
Garden Tomb
The Golden Gate
Golgotha
Pools of Bethesda
Church of the Pater Noster
Chapel of the Ascension
St. Peter in Gallicantu
Christian Quarter
Armenian Quarter
Saint Helena Church
Mary's Tomb
Shrine of the Book
Saint Anne's Church
Stations of the Cross
Tomb of Lazarus
Dominus Flevit
Via Dolorosa
Dormition Church
According to the present day mayor, Ramiz Jaraisy, Nazareth is not just another city; it is a "priceless national asset. Part of humanity's history and heritage."
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Church of the Annunciation
Church of St. Gabriel
Synagogue Church
Starting from the recent and moving back to the past, the Church of the Nativity was the scene of the hostage crisis in 2005, for which there was a bloodless resolution thanks to the fine mediators on the scene.
Shepherd's Field
Located in Bet Sahour, which is east of Bethlehem, Shepherd's Field is where the angels appeared to shepherds and announced the birth of Jesus.
Mt. Megiddo, in the center of Israel that is known as the location at which the eventual disaster will erupt in some way. As the Hebrew word for mountain is "Har", the connection in even stronger.
Caesarea Philippi is situated on one of four springs
feeding the Jordan River. It sits on the southwestern
slope of Mount Hermon, on a terrace 1,150 feet
(350 meters) overlooking a fertile valley.
See Bethsaida on Sea of Galilee, site of several miracles as
well as recent archaeological findings from the time of Jesus.
The actual location of Cana is something of a biblical blur and is surrounded by speculation. The modern town of Kfar Kana is situated in the Galilee, five miles northeast of Nazareth, and is populated by Christians and Muslims.
Capernaum is the place where Jesus began to preach after the Temptation in the Wilderness, which is the first recorded event following His baptism.
Famous for being the birthplace of John the Baptist, Ein Karem is a village on the west side of Jerusalem and home to five different sites important to the Christian pilgrimage...
Emmaus has significance in both the Christian and Jewish narrative. Located a bit off the modern day Tel Aviv-Jerusalem highway, Emmaus is an important site in the Christian narrative since...
Situated where the Bible's most famous river, the Jordan, emerges from the Sea of Galilee, Jardenit is the site where Christians have reaffirmed their faith for over 2,000 years.
The Jezreel Valley is known under many names including Campus Legionis, Esdraelon, Plain of Megiddo and many more. Its claim to fame for the Christian pilgrim is the fact that the Bible speaks of ...
A particularly significant event in Christian history took place in Jaffa (“Joppa”). Documented in the Book of Acts, it is related that while visiting the house of Simon the tanner ...
The monastery at Latrun is a well known destination for the Christian pilgrim. The site, located on the road between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem was first established in 1890 by ...
The Church of the Sermon on the Mount is another location that is in some dispute. It is possible that this is the actual site of the sermon, but not very likely, according to Christian scholars.
Not a city or town as such, Tabgha is a small area on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee, near the ancient Capernaum and the hill where the Mount of Beatitudes is situated.
In Bethlehem, the Church of the Milk Grotto is traditionally known to be a site where Mary stopped to breastfeed the infant Jesus while fleeing to Egypt...
Cited in both the Old and New Testaments, Mount Tabor is a hill rising 500 meters above the Jezreel Valley in the Galilee. In ancient times it was in a strategic position overlooking the north-south road...
Qumran is famous for its proximity to the caves where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found. Vanishing from site and mind for the most part after its destructions by the Romans in around 68 C.E. ...
Located in Wadi Qelt in the eastern West Bank, the St. George Orthodox Monastery is a sixth-century cliff-hanger, literally: It is built into the cliffs of the wadi and is inhabited by Greek Orthodox monks...
Known as Zippori in Hebrew, Sepphoris was a prosperous and beautiful town in Jesus’ day, a hike of just a couple of hours from Nazareth.
Stella Maris is a Carmelite Order monastery in Haifa, Israel's third largest city. It is located where 12th century religious hermits, imitating Elijah's cave-dwelling, organized themselves during the Crusader occupation.
Helena is considered to be the first Christian pilgrim and a saint by the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Eastern and Roman Catholic churches, as well as by the Anglican Communion and Lutheran Churches. A 12th century Armenian church is named for her; it is located in Jerusalem in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, on the lower level. She herself had ordered this building, as well as the Grotto of the Nativity, to be built while on one of her visits to Jerusalem. These two structures, built hundreds of years after death (she lived from about 250 until 330), are of course the most important of the many destinations in the Holy Land and around the world commemorating her devotion to Christianity.
Helena was the mother of Constantine the Great. Though of humble parents she wed Constantius Chlorus and bore him one son, Constantine, in 274. Constantius later left Helena to marry Theodora for political considerations and cooperation with the west, the exposure of which resulted in Constantine’s embracing of Christianity. The son remained loyal to his mother; after his father died, and Constantine came to power, he called his mother to the court, giving her the title Augusta and demanding all revere her. She embraced Christianity and used her power to insure the spread of the religion. Known so well for her visits to Palestine, where she established relief agencies for the poor and founded new churches or had old ones reconstructed, another legend was born about St. Helena. It is told that at the ripe age of 80 or more, she discovered the hiding place of three crosses believed to be those of Jesus and the two thieves crucified with him. In every country in the world where there is a strong Christian community, there is sure to be a church or monument to St. Helena, such as the pillar-ornamented Helena Pool in Ramle (a suburb of Tel Aviv) and the St. Helena Monastery in Bulgaria.

