The Sea of Galilee

The Land Where Jesus Walked

This is the place where Jesus did most of His work. He called His disciples here. He calmed storms here. He walked on these waters.

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The Centre of His Ministry

The Sea of Galilee is the stage for the most dramatic moments in the Gospels. Jesus called His first disciples on its shore — Peter, Andrew, James, and John, all fishermen (Matthew 4:18-22). He taught the crowds from a boat on its waters. He preached the Sermon on the Mount on the hills above it.

He calmed a storm on this lake (Mark 4:35-41). He walked on its waters in the darkness before dawn, and Peter walked toward Him (Matthew 14:22-33). He fed five thousand near Bethsaida, and four thousand near the Decapolis — both within walking distance of Migdal.

Sea of Galilee from hillside

Jesus Came to Migdal

After feeding the four thousand, the Bible records that Jesus got into a boat and went to the region of Magadan (Matthew 15:39) — also called Dalmanutha (Mark 8:10). This is Migdal. Jesus was here. He stood on this ground.

He Walked on These Waters

The walking on water is not a magic trick. It is a revelation of divine identity. When the disciples see Jesus walking on the storm, they are terrified. He speaks the words that echo God's self-revelation to Moses at the burning bush: ‘It is I' — in Greek, ego eimi, the same phrase used for ‘I AM.’

For the believer, this image resonates deeply. The Sea of Galilee is not abstract theology. It is a real place. You can stand on its shore. And when you hold a Guardianship of Migdal, you are connected to the very ground from which Mary watched those waters — the same waters her Lord walked upon.

The Magdala Stone

Physical Proof

In 2009, archaeologists excavating the first-century synagogue at Migdal uncovered a carved stone block. It bears the oldest known depiction of the Temple menorah found in a synagogue context — a seven-branched candelabra carved in relief.

This is not legend. It is limestone, dated to the first century before the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD. Mary of Magdala would have seen this stone.

The physical reality of Migdal is not an article of faith. It is an archaeological fact.

This Land is Real. Your Connection Can Be Too.

By becoming a Guardian of Migdal, you are protecting this ground — not just for yourself, but for believers everywhere, and for the generations to come.

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