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Baptism/ Bethany beyond the Jordan/ Al-Maghtas

The site where Jesus of Nazareth is believed to have been baptized by John the Baptist marks the foundation of one of the world’s largest religions and encompasses several other sites significant to all three Abrahamic religions.

The Bible pinpoints “Bethany Beyond the Jordan” (John 1:28) as the location where Jesus came to John, “to be baptized of him” (Matthew 3:13).

Located on the east bank of the Jordan River, some five miles north of the Dead Sea, the humble site marks a landmark moment in the birth of Christianity. Religious scholars believe this is the spot where Jesus began his ministry and gathered his first disciples: Andrew, Peter, Philip, and Nathanael (John 1:35-51).

While tourists and modern-day pilgrims prefer gathering on the present-day banks of the Jordan River, the baptism site is located farther inland, near St. John the Baptist Church, at the bottom of worn marble steps leading down to a natural spring.

The baptism site was only rediscovered after the Israel-Jordan peace treaty, when mine-clearing operations exposed the ancient riverbed. Sandstone walls dating back to the first century A.D. still bear rudimentary crosses etched by early pilgrims who stopped here on their route from Jerusalem to Mount Nebo. Over the centuries, medieval saints, monks, and scribes continued to affirm this as the site of the baptism. In 2015, supported by the extensive work of contemporary archaeologists, scholars, and church leaders, Al Maghtas (“the place of baptism”) was inscribed by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee.

The wider collection of old and new churches at Al Maghtas stands as a testament to the global spread of Christianity and the spirit of tolerance under Jordan’s Islamic rule. Some churches still remain open for worship, while several more are mere ruins that date back to the Byzantine period, with brilliant mosaic floors. Hermit monks once inhabited the nearby caves, now open and accessible to visitors.

Jews, Christians, and Muslims find common ground at Tell al Kharrar, or Elijah’s Hill, where the Prophet Elijah is said to have ascended into heaven on a “chariot of fire” (II Kings 2:11). The universal holy site represents the overall mission of this place, namely to promote peace, understanding, and religious tolerance between all peoples. To visit Al Maghtas is to follow in the footsteps of ancient prophets, holy men, and pilgrims, and to witness the earliest beginnings of so much in the modern world.

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