By Christi Mays
Since ninth grade, Shayden Spradley has cherished the small wooden cross carved from an olive branch that she carries in her Bible bag. Her Bible study leaders surprised her and the other classmates with souvenirs from their tour of Israel. She has treasured the cross all these years, and it has served as a reminder and promise to one day visit the Holy Land herself.
This past December, Shayden fulfilled that longtime dream when she and 16 other 鶹Ƶ students journeyed through the Promised Land during a two-week study abroad. The trip was one she won’t soon forget—walking where Jesus and His disciples walked, seeing His birthplace, and standing where He preached.
“We were sitting in a synagogue in Capernaum, and it was just cool to realize, ‘Oh! This is really where Jesus was—where Jesus performed the miracles!’” Shayden said of the town where Jesus lived and preached.
Trip highlights included visiting notable places Shayden had read about in her Bible all her life, including the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, where Jesus chased away the moneychangers; the Dead Sea; the Garden of Gethsemane; the Mount of Olives, where Jesus prayed the day before He was crucified; the Sea of Galilee; and the Western Wall. The group trekked through many ancient cities, including Bethlehem, Nazareth and Magdala, named after one of Jesus’ famous followers, Mary Magdalene.
Just like attending class in a classroom, the Israel study abroad trip counts for course credit. Students are required to keep a journal of their expeditions and produce a couple of essays when they return home. But largely, the class is the experience in the country— which is something they can’t get from a textbook, said Dr. Adam Winn, who led this trip along with Dr. Kim Bodenhamer.
“It’s seeing the land. It’s learning the significance of each site. It’s experiencing the culture,” said Winn, associate professor in the College of Christian Studies. “You don’t get that same experience looking at pictures. So now, when my students read about these places in the Bible, they know what it looks like. They know what the weather’s like. They know what it smells like.”