On the famous mappa mundi, housed in Hereford Cathedral, Jerusalem is at the center of the world.
For Jews, Christians, and Muslims, this holy city represents not merely a physical focus for their faith, but a theological and spiritual emblem: simultaneously a very earthly city and a uniquely celestial kingdom. How has this insignificant city become such a critical location in geopolitics and psychogeography? I'm Talking about Jerusalem explores the many and varied meanings and resonances of ""Jerusalem""--in history, prophecy, theology, literature, imagery, and myth.
""Jerusalem"" appears 806 times in the Bible. For the Jews, Jerusalem is not simply a significant physical place, past and present, but a religious concept transcending time. For Christians, it is the site of Jesus's last days--and of countless Christian structures, relics, and remains. Islamic tradition has celebrated the city with seventeen names; it was a key stage in Muhammad's night journey and became Islam's third holiest place of pilgrimage. For all three Abrahamic religions, Jerusalem is a major pilgrimage destination.
Aldous Huxley wrote, ""We have each of us our Jerusalem""--a vision of what life might be. I'm Talking about Jerusalem considers Jerusalem as a political goal and eternal home; its place in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic eschatology; and as a metaphor for all we yearn for in this world and the next. A place of perfection and conclusion, a golden city, a paradise to be attained after death.
Industry Reviews
“A most remarkable book: large swathes of history, archaeology, and legend, the approach of three very different Abrahamic faiths, present experience, and future hopes, are all here. Whilst there is past celebration, history has also a somber story to tell—of invasion, occupation, and destruction. Present day ethnic conflict, violence, abuse of justice, with pious pilgrimage occasionally giving way to psychotic behavior, obscure the vision of Jerusalem as a symbol of future hope.”
—John Briggs, professor emeritus of history, University of Birmingham
“For those who ‘get’ their past from Indiana Jones and Monty Python, equally for believers who ‘get’ their future from Tim LaHaye and Hal Lindsey, everybody needs to get ‘talking about Jerusalem’ with Tim Dowley. Jesus spent five days in the city, and it killed him. Five hours with Tim and ‘the city of David, which is Zion,’ will come vividly to life. Even-handed and full of biblical learning, I’m Talking about Jerusalem is a gem of compressed historical insight. Everyone who reveres the Holy Land should read this modest but weighty tome.”
—James Moore, professor emeritus of the history of science, Open University