a Baptismal Font at Mt Nebo,
Mount Nebo in Jordan is the place from which it is believed Moses, at the end of his life, looked into the Promised Land which he would never enter (Deut. 34:1-8). During the Byzantine era this high position was marked by church and monastery complexes and, in modern times, a stylised brazen serpent on a pole and a viewing platform have been erected. Pope John Paul II used the latter on March 20, 2000.
The main church (a three aisled basilica) replaced a 4th-century church that was somehow destroyed, but even it replaced an earlier structure. The site is cared for by the Franciscans whose modern monastery is nearby. They have a strong tradition of professional archaeology in the Holy Lands and have preserved the old remains (including Byzantine mosaics with inscriptions) incorporating them into the restored Memorial of Moses.
Two baptismal fonts have been preserved: both were used for either immersion (submersion) or affusion (pouring of water over the head of the candidate who knelt or sat in the sunken font). The font in the North Baptistry is cross-shaped with steps descending and the one pictured above (in the new baptistry which replaced a funerary chapel in the late-6th-century) is circular with a quatrefoil-shaped font internally.
The font was carved out of one large stone: a monolith. Inscriptions on the front are translated (by Piccirillo, 2004) “Sergius the holy bishop to God: Yours I bring to You under the most pious abbot Martyrius.” Two circular mosaics set into the floor read: ”With the help of our Lord Jesus Christ the construction of the holy church and the baptistry was finished, under the most pious bishop Sergius and the most beloved by God the priest and hegumen Martyrius in the 15tth indiction of the year 492 (i.e., 597 A.D.)

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