During our 2018 Holy
Land Pilgrimage Lakes Church Lead Pastor Dr. Aaron D. Burgner taught extensively
from the Southern Steps of the Temple in Jerusalem. So, what happened at the Southern Steps?
We know for sure that is where Jesus walked and taught. When Neil Armstrong
visited Israel in 1994, he asked his host if there was a place where Jesus
would have walked—without a doubt—2,000 years ago. His host, Archaeologist
Meir Ben Dov and the excavator of the Temple Mount and southern walls in Jerusalem, answered
that the Southern Steps were, for sure, the steps that Jesus would have used
when He walked up to the Temple. Mr. Armstrong bent down and kissed the ground,
saying that this was an even more exciting moment for him than walking on the
moon. If you were to go to Israel today and wanted to walk where you knew
Jesus would have walked, you would go to the Southern Steps. That’s because the
southern steps, which have been excavated in recent years, served as the main
entrance to the entire Temple Mount complex. We know from Scripture that
Jesus went to the Temple several times throughout His life. The Temple
itself has since been destroyed, and the Temple Courts are buried under years
of civilization and rebuilding. But the southern steps can still be walked
upon today.
The
Bible says that Jesus first visited the Temple as a child, when Mary and Joseph
brought Him here to be consecrated to the Lord (see Luke 2:21-40). The
family then came back to Jerusalem year after year, as was their custom, for
the yearly Feast of the Passover (Luke 2:41). It was on one of these trips that
Mary and Joseph lost Jesus as they were traveling back home, thinking that He
was traveling back with relatives or friends. After searching for Him for
three days, they finally found Him, back in Jerusalem in the Temple
Courts. He was sitting among the teachers, listening to them, and asking
them questions. Upon hearing that His parents had been anxiously
searching for Him, Jesus replied: “Why were you searching for me?
Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” (Luke 2:49). Then as an
adult, Jesus often taught crowds of people there at the Temple Courts.
The Bible says that during the final week of His life: “Each day Jesus was
teaching at the Temple, and each evening He went out to spend the night on the
hill called the Mount of Olives, and all the people came early in the morning
to hear Him at the Temple.” (Luke 21:37-38). If just walking where Jesus
walked sounds exciting—like it was to Neil Armstrong—imagine what it would have
been like to hear Him speak!
Imagine
being there in person, back in 33 A.D., and listening to the words that Jesus
spoke, coming from His own mouth! Imagine hearing Jesus tell some of His
parables for the very first time, right there in the Temple Courts: the
parable of the two sons, or of the ungrateful tenants, or of the wedding
banquet of a king. Imagine Jesus answering people’s questions, whether honest
and practical questions, or those that were asked by people in order to trap
Him, with words that astonished all who heard them and silenced His critics. Imagine
hearing Jesus answer the question about whether or not it was right to pay
taxes to Caesar, and then hearing Jesus ask you to take out a coin with
Caesar’s image on it and saying: “Give to Caesar’s what is Caesar’s, and
give to God what is God’s” (Matthew 22:21). Or imagine Him answering the
question about the resurrection of the dead, and whether or not people would
really live again after they died, and hearing Jesus say: “Have you not read
what God said to you, ‘I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God
of Jacob’? He is not the God of the dead but of the living” (Matthew
22:31b-32). Or imagine Jesus being asked what He thought was the greatest
commandment in the law, and hearing Jesus say for the first time: ‘Love the
Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your
mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like
it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself’ (Matthew 22:37-38). Or imagine
watching, along with Jesus, as a poor widow passed in front of you and put two
very small coins into the Temple offering, and hearing Jesus say: “I tell
you the truth, this poor widow has put in more than all the others. All these
people gave their gifts out of their wealth; but she out of her poverty put in
all she had to live on” (Luke 21:2-4). All of these things took place
at the Temple Courts. No wonder the Bible says that all those who heard
Jesus speak there—even when He was just twelve—were “…amazed at His
understanding and His answers” (Luke 2:47). No wonder the Bible says that
the crowds who heard Jesus speak at the Temple Courts as an adult were “…astonished
at His teaching” (Matthew 22:33b). No wonder the Bible says that when He
spoke during the feast that “…all the people came early in the morning
to hear Him at the Temple” (Luke 21:38).
Jesus
isn’t a teacher who is now dead and silent. He’s just as alive and eager
to speak to you today as He was back then. As the Bible says: “Jesus
Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8).
What
a blessing it is to be able to walk where Jesus walked, as Neil Armstrong did,
and what a blessing it would have been to hear Him teach in person at the
Temple Courts. But what a blessing it is that we can still come to Him
every day, whether early in the morning, throughout the day, or late in the
day, and hear the wisdom of God as spoken through Jesus Christ Himself. Come to
Christ again today—and every day—and let Him speak His words of life to you.
Father,
thank You for sending Jesus to speak to the crowds at the Temple, and thank You
for those who recorded His words so we can continue to hear Him speak to us
today. Open our hearts to hear those words as we come to You again today
and every day. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Look
Up—meditate on Hebrews 13:8 … pray to see what it reveals about the
character of God.
Look
In—as you meditate on Hebrews 13:8 … pray to see how you might apply
it to your life. Be propelled to ask galvanizing questions about your
discoveries: "Because God is_________, I will_____________."
Look
Out—as you meditate on Hebrews 13:8 …pray to see how you might apply
it to your relationships with others. Let the nature of God impact on
every relationship, for your good, and for His glory.
Beth Willis Miller, M.Ed., is the author of The Romans Road To Salvation; 26 Devotions Focusing on Christ in the Nativity Alphabet; Twenty Encouraging Devotions with Inspiring Bible Journaling Artwork; & Name Above All Names Devotional: Focusing on 26 Alphabetical Names of Christ, with Illustrator Krista Hamrick. 31-Day Prayer Journey Leading to Easter. She is married with two adult children, and two grandsons.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
THE SOUTHERN STEPS OF THE TEMPLE IN JERUSALEM
Lakes Church Lead Pastor Dr. Aaron D. Burgner teaching on the Southern Steps
of the Temple in Jerusalem
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