Paul brings the Word to Asia
As the Gospel of Jesus Christ began to spread St Paul took
the Word to Asia Minor, modern day Turkey. The scenery has
changed little over the past two thousand years, and to sail
these seas and visit the sites Paul visited is to experience
the ambience of those heady days of the beginning of our
faith
The Seven Churches
The Seven Churches of Asia mentioned by
John in the Book of Revelation. He talked about the churches
at Smyrna, modern Izmir, Pergamum, still in remarkable
condition, Thyatira, Philadelphia, Sardis, ancient capital of
Croesus, Laodicea and, of course, the great city of Ephesus,
where Mary, Jesus’ mother, was said to have spent the last
years of her life.
A Christian Empire
Testimony of the importance of Asia
Minor in the history of the Early Church is the fact that it
was here that the first Christian state arose, the Byzantine
Empire, which was to keep the light of Christianity alive for
over a thousand years when Rome had been overrun by
barbarians. There are powerful echoes of these ecclesiastical
pioneers in the many early Byzantine remains which can still
be found around these shores.
Journey of devotion
We have found with other Christian groups that the
atmosphere of the ancient sites imparts a deep spiritual
dimension to the tour and allows for devotional moments at
appropriate places on the way. Meanwhile, the seclusion of the
cruise, while invoking a true sense of pilgrimage, also
engenders a profound sense of fellowship. |