"Pool of Siloam"@en . "Desert"@en . "The Pool of Siloam, the noted place in Scripture where Jesus told a blind man whom He put clay in his eyes to go wash his eyes in, is one of the areas in Jerusalem that the defending Jewish believers are stationed at defending the city from the Unity Army in \"Glorious Appearing\"."@en . . . "The Pool of Siloam, the noted place in Scripture where Jesus told a blind man whom He put clay in his eyes to go wash his eyes in, is one of the areas in Jerusalem that the defending Jewish believers are stationed at defending the city from the Unity Army in \"Glorious Appearing\"."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "The Pool of Siloam is found a bit south from Jerusalem. It is fed by the Spring of Gihon through Hezekiah's Aqueduct."@en . "The Pool of Siloam is found a bit south from Jerusalem. It is fed by the Spring of Gihon through Hezekiah's Aqueduct."@en . . "The terrace outside the Pool"@en . . . . "The pool is mentioned or alluded to several times in the Bible. Isaiah 8:6 mentions the pool's waters, while Isaiah 22:9 ff. references the construction of Hezekiah's tunnel. For Christians, the pool has additional significance as it is mentioned in the Gospel of John, as the location to which Jesus sent a man who had been blind from birth, as part of the act of healing him. A substantial remodeling of the pool was constructed in the 5th century, under Byzantine direction, and is said to have been built at the behest of the Empress Aelia Eudocia. This pool, having been somewhat abandoned and left to ruin, partly survives to the present day; surrounded by a high wall of stones on all sides (except for an arched entrance to Hezekiah's tunnel - which was only rediscovered in the 19th century), the pool is quite small, and has a modestly sized mosque next to (and partly over) it."@en . "The pool is mentioned or alluded to several times in the Bible. Isaiah 8:6 mentions the pool's waters, while Isaiah 22:9 ff. references the construction of Hezekiah's tunnel. For Christians, the pool has additional significance as it is mentioned in the Gospel of John, as the location to which Jesus sent a man who had been blind from birth, as part of the act of healing him."@en . . "Arthur refreshes in the water"@en . . . . "Pool of Siloam"@en .