Join Grace Church for an experience unlike any other as we take you behind the scenes to explore the lands of the Bible in a way that will change your life forever. Walk in the footsteps of Jesus as you explore the places where He and the disciples walked, and experience sites familiar to you from scripture, like Jerusalem, Bethlehem, the Sea of Galilee, and more.
The heart of this journey is to empower you to become the disciple God is calling you to be. By better understanding the world of the Bible, you will better understand the words of the Bible, transforming your ability to study it, do what it teaches, and share it with others.
Our expeditions, led by an experienced team of expertly trained guides, offer the finest travel experiences, providing you the peace of mind that everything down to the smallest detail has been taken care of so you can immerse yourself in the journey, encounter God, and be empowered to better understand the words of the Bible by exploring its world.
*NOTE: This trip is currently in the waitlist stage. Dates and details are subject to change as final arrangements are confirmed. Joining the waitlist ensures you’ll be the first to receive updates and have priority access when booking officially opens.
As of January 1, 2025, all U.S. citizens are required to apply for an ETA-IL (Electronic Travel Authorization for Israel) to enter Israel.
Please note that this application must be approved prior to your flight to Israel.
You can complete your application at the official government website below:
🔗 Apply for ETA-IL
We recommend submitting your application at least 30 days before departure to allow time for processing.
• (1) night at Vert Resort Netanya, (3) nights at Ramot Resort Hotel, (1) night at Nevo Hotel Dead Sea, and (3) nights at Dan Panorama Jerusalem Hotel.
• Tim Wardle
• Israeli-style meals at hotels
• At Satya Restaurant on March 14th
• Includes driver and WiFi
• Per person on the tour bus
• Allows for easier listening to the instructor while you are at a site
• As per itinerary, including private garden at Gethsemane booking
• Hotels, guide, driver, etc
• Devotional and educational materials per participant
• To/from Ben Gurion Airport
• Upon arrival and departure
• Checkout of hotel at midnight on last night (March 14th)
• Subscription to BibleX Ezra Tutor for 1-year following your trip
Travel Insurance is optional. Overseas Medical coverage is required
Depart USA. Get ready to embark on the adventure of a lifetime.
Upon arrival to Ben Gurion Airport by 5:00pm, our representative will meet you in the arrival hall to assist you with your luggage. You will meet your guide and bus and travel to your hotel along the Mediterranean coast. Dinner and overnight at hotel.
Our morning begins at the port city of Caesarea built by Herod the Great (Matt. 2). This was the second largest harbor in the Roman Empire during the first century. At Caesarea, Peter visited the gentile centurion Cornelius (Acts 10), and he and his household became the first gentile followers of Jesus. The Apostle Paul remained under house arrest in Caesarea for two and a half years. Here he stood before Felix, Festus, and Agrippa II (Acts 23-25). From the harbor of Caesarea, Paul sailed to Rome leaving Israel for the last time. While at the site, we will visit the ancient theater with its magnificent view overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. We will see Herod the Great’s palace that served as the residence of the Roman officials in the land, like Pontius Pilate. We will remember Pilate’s governorship of Judaea by looking at a replica of a stone inscription mentioning Pilate dedicating a temple to the Roman Emperor Tiberius. Our visit takes us through the ancient stadium and harbor and ends looking at the ancient aqueduct of Caesarea that supplied the city with its water. After departing Caesarea, we travel to the boyhood home of Jesus, Nazareth. We visit the Church of the Annunciation, built over the traditional place where the angel Gabriel announced to Mary that she would be the mother of Jesus (Luke 1:26-37). The church is built on top of the ancient village of Nazareth, and we will visit a small museum that shows some of the finds and homes from the village. We then overlook of the Jezreel Valley from Mount Precipice. From this vantage point, we will see the settings for several biblical stories. We will end our visit in Nazareth by spending a few hours with members of some Israeli Arab churches that Grace Church supports. Dinner and overnight at our hotel on the Sea of Galilee.
Today we travel into the Golan Heights and the upper Jordan Valley. Our day begins at the nature reserve of Dan. The ancient city of Dan, which formed the northern boundary of biblical Israel, sits on the Dan Spring, one of the three tributaries of the Jordan River. In addition to walking through the beautiful nature reserve, we will visit the ancient site of Dan seeing its high place (1 Kings 12:29), Israelite gate, and the Middle Bronze Age gate from the time of Abraham (Gen. 14:14). Next, we travel to Banias, ancient Caesarea Philippi (Matt. 16:13; Mark 8:27). Near Caesarea Philippi, Jesus asked his disciples, “Who do men say that I am?” From Banias, we drive up into the foothills of Mount Hermon (Ps. 133) and into the Golan Heights. At a high overlook on the Israel-Syrian border, we look into Syria towards Damascus. Our day concludes with a visit to a reconstructed ancient Jewish village, Katzrin. Here you will be able to visualize village life in the time of the New Testament. Dinner and overnight on the Sea of Galilee.
Our journey today focuses upon the ministry of Jesus around the Sea of Galilee. Our morning begins at Arbel which provides a breathtaking view of the Ginnosar Valley and the northern stretch of the Sea of Galilee. Next, we travel to one of the most exciting and important ongoing archaeological excavations in Israel, Magdala. Here we will visit one of the few, excavated, first century synagogues in the land of Israel. Its date coincides with the time of Jesus ministry in the area. We will also see wealthy homes from the village, as well as the first century harbor. we travel to St. Peter’s Primacy, which remembers Jesus’ meeting with his disciples upon the shores of the lake. From St. Peter’s Primacy, we travel next to the ancient town of Capernaum where Jesus made his home around the lake (Matt. 4:13). Here he healed the centurion’s servant (Matt. 8:5). The magnificent limestone synagogue of the fourth century AD has been party reconstructed and looms over the site. We then journey to Almagor, which overlooks the Beitsaida Valley where the Jordan River flows into the Sea of Galilee, and where Jesus fed the 5,000 (Luke 9:10-17). Our travel takes us to Chorazin one of the three cities cursed by Jesus (Matt. 11:21; Luke 10:13). At this site, we see the ancient homes and Jewish ritual immersion pools, as well as the magnificent basalt synagogue from the fifth century AD. Inside the synagogue is a replica of a Seat of Moses (Matt. 23:2). From Chorazin, we visit the small museum at Kibbutz Ginnosar that houses an ancient boat discovered in the 1980s in the Sea of Galilee. This boat dates to the first century and was a boat used by fisherman on the lake. Our day concludes with an evening boat-ride on the Sea of Galilee. The ancient fishermen fished the lake at night. Riding on the waters of the lake in the evening offers a unique opportunity to connect with Jesus and his disciples on the lake. Dinner and overnight at the hotel on the Sea of Galilee.
Today we drive from the Sea of Galilee, the lowest fresh-water lake in the world, through the Jordan River Valley, to the Dead Sea, the lowest place on earth. Our first stop is the ancient city of Beth-Shean. The impressive ruins of the Greco-Roman city sit underneath the shadow of the earlier more ancient ruins perched atop the tel of the city. From Beth- Shean, we travel to the baptismal site of Qsar el-Yahud, near to the modern and ancient city of Jericho. We travel next to the site of Qumran. In caves around the site, the world- famous Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered. Qumran was the settlement of the community that produced many of the Dead Sea Scrolls. After visiting Qumran, we travel to our hotel on the Dead Sea, where we can float in the Dead Sea and relax for the evening. Dinner and overnight at our hotel on the Dead Sea.
Our first stop is the desert palace-fortress built by Herod the Great, Masada. During the First Jewish Revolt (AD 66-73), Jewish rebels lived on Masada until they were surrounded by the Tenth Roman Legion. According to the first century Jewish historian Josephus, the rebels chose to commit suicide instead of slavery and death at the hands of the Romans. While visiting the site, we will see the palaces of Herod the Great, his bath houses and store-rooms. We will also see buildings converted by the Jewish rebels for their use, like the synagogue. Evidence of the Roman siege can be seen in the siege ramp and Roman camps that surround Masada. After Masada, we visit the oasis of En Gedi where David sought refuge from Saul. From En Gedi, we drive to the overlook of the Wadi Qilt, the ancient road between Jerusalem and Jericho. This was the setting for Jesus’ story of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37). On Jesus’ final journey to Jerusalem, he used this road as he came from Jericho to Jerusalem (Luke 19:1-11). Our day concludes by driving to Jerusalem and having our first view of the Holy City from the Mount of Olives. Dinner and overnight at our hotel in Jerusalem.
Our morning begins with a visit to the City of David, the oldest part of Jerusalem and the city David conquered and made his capital. We then journey through Hezekiah’s Tunnel. Next, we visit the southern wall of the Temple Mount. On the first-century street, we see the shops and markets that once surrounded the Temple, a possible location of the money changers (Luke 19:45–48). We then proceed to the southern entrances of the Temple, where we walk the steps ancient pilgrims took as they ascended to the Temple. Late in the morning, we visit the Israel Museum. Here, we will see a scale model of Jerusalem on the eve of its destruction in AD 70. We will also visit the Shrine of the Book, which houses some of the Dead Sea Scrolls, including some of the oldest copies of the Old Testament. Our tour of the museum concludes with a walk through the archaeological wing to visit two galleries dedicated to Israel during the Old and New Testament periods. Following our museum visit, we journey to Jerusalem’s Mahaneh Yehudah Market for lunch, where we will have the opportunity to sample a variety of local and international cuisines. Dinner and overnight in Jerusalem.
Today our journey begins at Nebi Samwil. Incorrectly identified as the tomb of the prophet Samuel, from this his hill we will see the northern neighborhoods of Jerusalem. We will also look over the tribal territory of Benjamin, where two-thirds of the Old Testament took place. Our vantage point offers us a view of the modern Arab village of el-Jib, biblical Gibeon (Josh. 10). While defending Gibeon against five Amorite kings, Joshua prayed for the sun to stand still. We then drive into the Shephelah (Deut. 1:7), an area of rolling hills between Israel’s hill country and the Mediterranean coast. We enter the Elah Valley, the site of the famous confrontation between David and Goliath (1 Sam. 17). Here we will open the biblical story and see the landscape recorded in the Bible come alive before our eyes. From the Elah Valley, we make our way to the hometown of David, Bethlehem. In Bethlehem, we remember the birth of Jesus and visit the Church of Nativity, the oldest church in the Holy Land, built over the traditional site of Jesus’ birth. Dinner and overnight in Jerusalem.
We start our morning with a beautiful view of the city of Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives. We walk down the mountain following the modern path used by pilgrims on Palm Sunday visiting the church of Dominus Flevit, which remembers Jesus’ weeping over the city as he rode into it, and the traditional location of the Garden of Gethsemane. We cross the Kidron Valley into the Old City and visit St. Anne’s Church built over top of the Pools of Bethesda (John 5) where Jesus healed the lame man. We will take the opportunity to sing in the beautiful Crusader church on the site. Our journey continues at Jaffa Gate where in the first century Herod’s palace stood. Here the story of Jesus begins (Matt. 2) with the visit of the wisemen to Herod, and here his story ended because at Herod’s palace Jesus stood before Pontius Pilate (Mark 15:16). From Jaffa Gate, we walk into the Jewish Quarter and visit the Herodian Quarter, a series of priestly homes from the first century. We then walk along the Byzantine Cardo and see the walls of Jerusalem from the eighth century BC and the first century BC. Passing the Gennath Gate, we follow the historic route Jesus traveled from Pilate to his place of execution at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. Our program concludes with a communion at the Garden Tomb. After a farewell dinner, we depart Jerusalem for Ben Gurion Airport at midnight where you will return to your home country refreshed, challenged, and renewed in your faith.
Return home challenged and encouraged in your faith!
