The Resurrection Church[1][2] (Hebrew: הכנסייה הצלבנית באבו גוש Latin: Ecclesia Resurrectionis Domini Nostri Iesu), or the Church of the Crusaders in Abu Gosh, is the name given to a Catholic religious building consisting of a structure of the time of the Crusaders who belonged to the Knights Hospitaller, and today is a part of the Benedictine monastery in Abu Ghosh,[3][4] in central Israel.
The church is located in a place that was interpreted as described in Luke as Emmaus.
In 1141 the Crusaders came to Abu Gosh hospital and built the Church of the Resurrection as a fortress.
In 1899, the church was bought by the French State from 1901 and used by the Benedictines of France.
Today, it is part of a complex mixed Catholic monastery for both men and women.