Mensa Christi Church
Mensa Christi is a Roman Catholic church located in Nazareth, northern Israel.
Christian tradition
Mensa Christi contains a large rectangular block of limestone ) that, according to a pious legend, served as a table when Jesus had a meal with his disciples in his hometown. When a biblical reference needs to be applied, the quoted passage is from the Gospel of Mark, where Jesus appears to the eleven remaining apostles after his resurrection and finds them reclining at the table and eating, and he scolds them for not believing those who had witnessed him having returned from the dead.The three decades Jesus spent in Nazareth are commonly called "the silent years", with the Gospels telling us close to nothing about that long period in his life. Over the centuries, Christians have marked the sites commemorating events from Jesus' life in his home village.
History
In 1781 the Custody of the Holy Land bought the ruined church from the Muslims. The Franciscans initially built a chapel at this site in the latter half of the 18th century.The current church, a renovation of the earlier chapel, was completed in 1861.
The Israeli government, in a joint project with the local municipality, recently completed an $80 million renovation and restoration of the old city of Nazareth as part of the Millennium celebrations of the year 2000. A part of this project was the restoration of the church's frescoes and dome.