The Bible says that Jesus was imprisoned here after his arrest, and that the chickens were called twice before Peter, his disciple, denied Jesus three times, and that the latter built a church, called the chickens. On the morning of August 1, 2016, local guides took us first up to Mount Zion, which was called Mount Zion in medieval Jerusalem, and the walls and gates were still covered with bullet holes (photo 2), which was left in the 1967 Middle East war, stone-paved, smooth and jade-like. Walk past the Church of the Virgin of the Christian Church, built in 335 AD by St. Helena, the mother of Constantine I, the Roman emperor, is large and consists of several adjacent churches, a long, tall and pointed complex. See the sculpture of King David (photo 4), wearing a crown, holding a harp, with a large satellite on his neck, and two triangles overlapped into six corners. David once built the city of Jerusalem in Jewish history and was popular with Jews. Go up to the second floor, blow the air conditioner, and the tour guide arranged to read Matthew 17, the final dinner. Go down to the Resurrection Hall, where Jesus was betrayed by Judas, arrested and imprisoned in a dungeon, and sentenced the next day, carrying the cross and suffering. The tomb of King David is underground, and there are bronze sculptures of olive trees in the room, which are sent by the Pope. There are barley and grapes next to the olive tree, opposite the Muslim building, facing Mecca, the window flowers are Arabic, and the minaret reflects the historical denominations left traces here. There is a nameplate for the "Ten Commandments of Moses" (Photo 5): The Ten Commandments, also known as the "Ten Commandments", are said to have been personally conveyed to Moses by God at Mount Sinai, and are God's warnings to the Israelites. You shall not kill, you shall not commit adultery, you shall not steal, you shall not bear false witness against a framer, you shall not covet another's house, you shall not covet a man's wife, his servant, his ox, and his ass, and all his possessions. At 10:10, see the Cock Crow (photo 6), a Roman Catholic church that commemorates Peter's biblical denial of Jesus three times before the cock crow. On the observation deck, you can see the golden dome onion balls (photo 9).